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Enhancing Metabolome Annotation by Electron Impact Excitation of Ions from Organics-Molecular Networking.

Xinxin WangXiaoshan SunFubo WangChunmeng WeiFujian ZhengXiuqiong ZhangXinjie ZhaoChunxia ZhaoXin LuGuo-Wang Xu
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) is widely used in untargeted metabolomics, but large-scale and high-accuracy metabolite annotation remains a challenge due to the complex nature of biological samples. Recently introduced electron impact excitation of ions from organics (EIEIO) fragmentation can generate information-rich fragment ions. However, effective utilization of EIEIO tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is hindered by the lack of reference spectral databases. Molecular networking (MN) shows great promise in large-scale metabolome annotation, but enhancing the correlation between spectral and structural similarity is essential to fully exploring the benefits of MN annotation. In this study, a novel approach was proposed to enhance metabolite annotation in untargeted metabolomics using EIEIO and MN. MS/MS spectra were acquired in EIEIO and collision-induced dissociation (CID) modes for over 400 reference metabolites. The study revealed a stronger correlation between the EIEIO spectra and metabolite structure. Moreover, the EIEIO spectral network outperformed the CID spectral network in capturing structural analogues. The annotation performance of the structural similarity network for untargeted LC-MS/MS was evaluated. For the spiked NIST SRM 1950 human plasma, the annotation coverage and accuracy were 72.94 and 74.19%, respectively. A total of 2337 metabolite features were successfully annotated in NIST SRM 1950 human plasma, which was twice that of LC-CID MS/MS. Finally, the developed method was applied to investigate prostate cancer. A total of 87 significantly differential metabolites were annotated. This study combining EIEIO and MN makes a valuable contribution to improving metabolome annotation.
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