Reliable quantification of citrate isomers and isobars with direct-infusion tandem mass spectrometry

Qingyu Hu, Yuting Sun, Xiyan Mu, Yulan Wang*, Huiru Tang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Direct-infusion tandem mass spectrometry (DI-MS/MS) is an excellent tool for large cohort high-throughput quantitative metabolomics, MS imaging and single cell studies but incapable of discriminating isomers/isobars with similar MS spectral features. With experimental and density-functional theory (DFT) approaches, here, we comprehensively investigated the fragmentation pathways and characteristics of differential ion-mobility spectrometry (DMS) for three citrate isomers (citrate, isocitrate, glucaro-1,4-lactone) and an isobar (quinate) co-existing in biological sample such as urine. Results showed that all these compounds gave better MS spectra in negative-ion mode than positive-ion one and had numerous fragment ions under collision-induced dissociation (CID) with sequential losses of H2O and CO2. All observed fragment ions were assignable by combining experimental with DFT calculation results. A DI-DMS-MS/MS method was then developed to simultaneously quantify these four isomers/isobars with m/z 191–87 (CoV, −5.5 V), 191–73 (CoV, −3.5 V), 191–85 (CoV, −29.5 V) and m/z 191–93 (CoV, −41.5 V) for citrate, isocitrate, glucaro-1,4-lactone and quinate, respectively. The low limit-of-quantification was below 5.5 nM whilst accuracy was above 94% for all above compounds. The urinary concentrations of them in human and C57BL/6 mouse samples were further quantified showing clear inter-individual and inter-species level differences with significantly higher levels of isocitrate, glucaro-1,4-lactone and quinate in human urine samples than mouse ones. This provides an approach to understand the detailed fragmentation pathways for organic isomers/isobars and a high-throughput MS strategy to quantify them in complex mixtures for metabolomics, lipidomics, foodomics and exposomics especially when chromatographic separations are not useable.

Original languageEnglish
Article number124477
JournalTalanta
Volume259
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 1 2023
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Analytical Chemistry

Keywords

  • Citrate isomers
  • Collision-induced dissociation
  • Differential ion-mobility spectrometry
  • Direct-infusion tandem mass spectrometry

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