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Ion identity molecular networking for mass spectrometry-based metabolomics in the GNPS environment.

Robin SchmidDaniel PetrasLouis-Félix NothiasMingxun WangAllegra T AronAnnika JagelsHiroshi TsugawaJohannes RainerMar Garcia-AloyKai DührkopAnsgar KorfTomáš PluskalZdeněk KameníkAlan K JarmuschAndrés Mauricio Caraballo-RodríguezKelly C WeldonMelissa Nothias-EspositoAlexander A AksenovAnelize BauermeisterAndrea G Albarracín OrioCarlismari O GrundmannFernando VargasIrina KoesterJulia M GauglitzEmily C GentryYannick HövelmannSvetlana A KalininaMatthew A PendergraftMorgan PanitchpakdiRichard TehanAudrey Le GouëllecGajender AletiHelena Mannochio RussoBirgit ArndtFlorian HübnerHeiko HayenHui ZhiManuela RaffatelluKimberly A PratherLihini I AluwihareSebastian BöckerKerry L McPhailHans-Ulrich HumpfUwe KarstPieter C Dorrestein
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Molecular networking connects mass spectra of molecules based on the similarity of their fragmentation patterns. However, during ionization, molecules commonly form multiple ion species with different fragmentation behavior. As a result, the fragmentation spectra of these ion species often remain unconnected in tandem mass spectrometry-based molecular networks, leading to redundant and disconnected sub-networks of the same compound classes. To overcome this bottleneck, we develop Ion Identity Molecular Networking (IIMN) that integrates chromatographic peak shape correlation analysis into molecular networks to connect and collapse different ion species of the same molecule. The new feature relationships improve network connectivity for structurally related molecules, can be used to reveal unknown ion-ligand complexes, enhance annotation within molecular networks, and facilitate the expansion of spectral reference libraries. IIMN is integrated into various open source feature finding tools and the GNPS environment. Moreover, IIMN-based spectral libraries with a broad coverage of ion species are publicly available.
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