Super-Resolution Mass Spectrometry Enables Rapid, Accurate, and Highly Multiplexed Proteomics at the MS2 Level.
Anton N KozhinovAlex JohnsonKonstantin O NagornovMichael StadlmeierWarham Lance MartinLoïc DayonJohn CorthésyMartin WührYury O TsybinPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
In tandem mass spectrometry (MS2)-based multiplexed quantitative proteomics, the complement reporter ion approaches (TMTc and TMTproC) were developed to eliminate the ratio-compression problem of conventional MS2-level approaches. Resolving all high m / z complement reporter ions (∼6.32 mDa-spaced) requires mass resolution and scan speeds above the performance levels of Orbitrap TM instruments. Therefore, complement reporter ion quantification with TMT/TMTpro reagents is currently limited to 5 out of 11 (TMT) or 9 out of 18 (TMTpro) channels (∼1 Da spaced). We first demonstrate that a Fusion TM Lumos TM Orbitrap can resolve 6.32 mDa-spaced complement reporter ions with standard acquisition modes extended with 3 s transients. We then implemented a super-resolution mass spectrometry approach using the least-squares fitting (LSF) method for processing Orbitrap transients to achieve shotgun proteomics-compatible scan rates. The LSF performance resolves the 6.32 mDa doublets for all TMTproC channels in the standard mass range with transients as short as ∼108 ms (Orbitrap resolution setting of 50,000 at m / z 200). However, we observe a slight decrease in measurement precision compared to 1 Da spacing with the 108 ms transients. With 256 ms transients (resolution of 120,000 at m / z 200), coefficients of variation are essentially indistinguishable from 1 Da samples. We thus demonstrate the feasibility of highly multiplexed, accurate, and precise shotgun proteomics at the MS2 level.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- high performance liquid chromatography
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- capillary electrophoresis
- crispr cas
- simultaneous determination
- computed tomography
- breast cancer cells
- multiple sclerosis
- cell proliferation
- magnetic resonance
- sensitive detection