Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry Strategies to Elucidate the Anhydrous Structure of Noncovalent Guest/Host Complexes.
Jody C MayEmanuel ZlibutBenjamin K BlakleyConstance S WoodYansheng WeiBrandon ShowalterEric C DybeckEmma R RemishValeria GuidolinBryan A BernatJohn A McLeanPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Structural mass spectrometry (MS) techniques are fast and sensitive analytical methods to identify noncovalent guest/host complexation phenomena for desirable solution-phase properties. Current MS-based studies on guest/host complexes of drug and drug-like molecules are sparse, and there is limited guidance on how to interpret MS information in the context of host nanoencapsulation and inclusion. Here, we use structural MS strategies, combining energy-resolved MS (ERMS), ion mobility-MS (IM-MS), and computational modeling, to characterize 14 chemically distinct drug and drug-like compounds for their propensity to form guest/host complexes with the widely used excipient, beta-cyclodextrin (βCD). The majority (11/14) yielded a 1:1 guest/host complex, and ion mobility collision cross section (CCS) analysis provided subtle evidence of gas-phase compaction of complexes in both polarities. The three distinct dissociation channels observed in ERMS (i.e., charged βCD, charged guest, and partial guest loss) were used to direct charge-site assignments for computational modeling, and structural candidates were prioritized using helium-derived CCS measurements combined with root-mean-square distance analysis. The combined analytical information from ERMS, IM-MS, and computational modeling suggested that the majority of anhydrous complexes are inclusion complexes with βCD. Taken together, this work demonstrates a roadmap for how multiple MS-based analytical measurements can be combined to interpret the structures that guest/host complexes adopt in the absence of water.