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Distinguishing Oligosaccharide Isomers Using Far-Infrared Ion Spectroscopy: Identification of Biomarkers for Inborn Errors of Metabolism.

Rianne E van OutersterpPieter C KooijmanJona MerxUdo F H EngelkeNematollah OmidikiaMei-Lan H TonneijckKas J HouthuijsGiel BerdenTessa M A PetersDirk J LefeberMichel A A P WillemsenJasmin MecinovicJeroen J JansenKarlien L M CoeneRon A WeversThomas J BoltjeJos OomensJonathan K Martens
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Distinguishing isomeric saccharides poses a major challenge for analytical workflows based on (liquid chromatography) mass spectrometry (LC-MS). In recent years, many studies have proposed infrared ion spectroscopy as a possible solution as the orthogonal, spectroscopic characterization of mass-selected ions can often distinguish isomeric species that remain unresolved using conventional MS. However, the high conformational flexibility and extensive hydrogen bonding in saccharides cause their room-temperature fingerprint infrared spectra to have broad features that often lack diagnostic value. Here, we show that room-temperature infrared spectra of ion-complexed saccharides recorded in the previously unexplored far-infrared wavelength range (300-1000 cm -1 ) provide well-resolved and highly diagnostic features. We show that this enables distinction of isomeric saccharides that differ either by their composition of monosaccharide units and/or the orientation of their glycosidic linkages. We demonstrate the utility of this approach from single monosaccharides up to isomeric tetrasaccharides differing only by the configuration of a single glycosidic linkage. Furthermore, through hyphenation with hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, we identify oligosaccharide biomarkers in patient body fluid samples, demonstrating a generalized and highly sensitive MS-based method for the identification of saccharides found in complex sample matrices.
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