Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Principles of LC-MS Coupling

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Principles of LC-MS Coupling"— Presentation transcript:

1 Principles of LC-MS Coupling
Analytical Biotechnology Principles of LC-MS Coupling Dr. Isam Khalaila Biotechnology Engineering Department

2 Mass Spectrometer as Detector
Sensitive Picomoles of peptides; Specific High resolution Accurate mass Informative Confirmation Structure Aston discovered that even stable atoms have isotopes in 1919 – Nobel prize followed.

3 MS FOR BILOGICAL SAMPLES
THE CRUCIAL ISSUES IN BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES ARE: The diversity of proteins content low abundant proteins (hard to detect)

4 Proteomics Challenge Complex samples require simplification
Intact proteins are too big Large numbers of samples/replicates to be run Automation needed

5 Proteomics is the Analysis of Complex Mixtures
Separation of proteins/peptides is a necessity Intact protein separation Centrifugation Filtering LC Isoelectric focusing Gel electrophoresis Peptide separation Capillary electrophoresis

6 Liquid Chromatography
Coupling LC to MS can simplify samples and solve the problem of protein diversity and low abundant analytes.

7 LC-MS Application in Forensic Science
Analytes were separated at 40 °C on a Luna 3u PhenylHexyl column (50x2mm i.d., 3 μm) Maralikova and Weinmann J. Mass Spec. 2004; 39: 526–531

8 LC-MS Application in Forensic Science MS/MS of THC

9 LC-ESI-MS Analysis of D9-tetrahydrocannabinol in oral fluid samples
LC–MS chromatogram of an oral fluid sample of a cannabis consumer. Peak at t = 3.4 min: 51 ng/mL D9-THC: (a) oral fluid extract (m/z ); (b) oral fluid extract (m/z ). LC–MS analysis of blank oral fluid samples: (a) oral fluid extract (m/z ); (b) oral fluid extract (m/z ).

10 ESI mass spectrum of D9-THC
? H. Teixeira et al. Forensic Sci. Int :205–211

11 LC prinsiples: to refresh your memory
What is the purpose? Analytical Preparative What are the molecular characteristics of the analyte and sample?

12 Chromatography Scales
Chromatography Objective Analytical Information ID and concentration Semi Preparative Small amount of purified compound < 0.5 gr Preparative Large amounts of purified compound > 0.5 gr Industrial Manufacturing quantities gr-kg

13 Analyte properties Charge Hydrophobicity Affinity
Positive/negative Hydrophobicity Affinity “lock and key” sites Solubility & stability pH, ionic strength, organic solvents Molecular weight

14 Analytical Requirements
Linearity Precision Accuracy Sensitivity Assay reproducibility Robustness

15 Method Efficiency Two of the Major Factors Involved in “Efficiency” are: Number of Theoretical Plates Resolution

16 Efficiency of HPLC results from:
Resolution degree of separation between analyte and other species present in mixture Band spreading selectivity Recovery mass recovery activity recovery Capacity

17 Resolution of Separation

18 Resolution and Peak Separation

19 Number of Theoretical Plates (N)
H = Theoretical Plate Height L = Length of the Column. N = L / H

20 Particle Size and Flow Rate van Deemter Equation
H = A+ B/u + u [CM+CS] Height Equivalent to Theoretical Plate Linear Velocity HETP U Lowest HETP => Optimum Plate Count {cm/sec} HETP PLATES H C Term (kinetics of the analyte between mobile and stationary phase ) B Term (Axial Diffusion) Add the 3 terms to obtain final “van Deemter Curve” A Term (Particle size and how well bed was packed)

21 Optimization steps Select the mode pH map Optimize gradient/elution
gradient slope eluent concentration Loading study overload: peak width and shape

22 Reverse phase (RPC) Stationary phase hydrophobic and mobile phase hydrophilic column: silica, polystyrene covalently modified with alkyl chain 3-18 C’s EX: octadecylsilane (ODS) - C18 mobile phase: buffered water + organic solvent (propanol, CH3CN, CH3OH) gradient elution

23 Ion-Exchange (IEC) Ion exchange interactions between cationic or anionic analyte and stationary phase bearing opposite charge stationary phase: polystyrene, silica modified with functional groups such as quaternary amines mobile phase: buffer containing increasing concentration of salt (NaCl, MgCl2, K3PO4, NH4SO4) gradient elution

24 Analyzed molecules Proteins Peptides Nucleic acids
Pharmaceutical products

25 What Factors Are Used in Selecting an Efficient Procedure?
Efficiency deal with: Cost, speed, ease, safety, accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and freedom from interference. To achieve this, we must select an appropriate mobile phase, stationary phase (column), detector, and instrument variables (column temperature, flow rates, etc.).

26 Velocity and Stationary phase What is the Small Particle Advantage ?

27 Effects of linear velocity
0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 Time (min) 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 2.99 1.24 3.92 2.45 4.82 5.65 1.92 0.78 2.51 1.58 3.09 3.60 1.20 0.49 1.57 0.98 1.93 2.25 Hypersil GOLD C18, 50 x 2.1 mm, 5 um Mobile phases: 85% Water and 15%ACN Pressure: 42 bar Flow rate: 0.5 mL/min Detector: 230 nm Sample: 60 ng of six barbiturates Pressure: 69 bar Flow rate: 0.8 mL/min Pressure: 22 bar Flow rate: 0.3 mL/min

28 Particle size advantage
Hypersil GOLD C18, 50 x 2.1 mm, 5 um Mobile phase: 15% ACN and 85% Water Flow rate: 0.5 ml/min Pressure: 42 bar = 609 psi Detector: 230 nm Sample: 60 ng Hypersil GOLD C18, 50 x 2.1 mm, 1.9 um Mobile phase: 15% ACN and 85% Water Flow rate: 0.5 ml/min Pressure: 275 bar = 3989 psi Detector: 230 nm Sample: 60 ng

29 Even Smaller Particle Size
AU 0.000 0.010 0.020 0.030 0.040 0.050 Minutes 0.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 15.00 1.00 3.00 5.00 4.8 µm, 0.2 mL/min 354 psi Ultra Pressure Liquid Chromatography 1.7 µm, 0.6 mL/min 7656 psi

30 Sensitivity Increased as Particle Size Decreased

31 Resolution and Analysis Time Change with Column Length
Where: Rs = Resolution L = Column length T = Analysis time Column: 4.6 x 250 mm Rs1 : 3.6 T1: 17 min. Column: 4.6 x 75 mm

32 Small Particle Reduce Analysis Time While Maintaining High Resolution

33 Effect of Particle Size
Digest of complex protein mixture 5 µm Magic C18 3 µm Reprosil C18

34 Advantage of UPLC

35 Melamine in Food

36 Melamine quantitation and characterization
=? 113 110

37 High throughput HPLC for proteomics approach
Low MW High MW acidic basic

38 Making proteins to fit mass spec range…

39 Peptide LC Separation Simplification of mixtures
Removal of contaminants Concentration effect Direct coupling to mass spectrometer Automation

40 LC-Electrospray Coupling

41 Miniaturisation of LC Columns
4.6 mm ID 1 mm ID 180 um ID 75 um ID 10 um ID Sample load Speed of analysis Sensitivity

42 Details of Plumbing with Column
hV PicoFrit LC Flow

43 Concentration effect Protein digest (peptides) Peptide total 100 fmol
Injection volume 2µL Peptide conc. 50 fmol/µL Flow rate 0.1 uL/min Elution time 0.4 min Peptide concentration 0.1 l/min * 0.4 min = 2500 fmol/ l Concentration factor = 50 times 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Time (min) 20 40 60 80 100 27.29 30.40 582.54 536.76 25.94 424.96 25 sec

44 Nano LC-MS (ESI or MALDI)
Bodnar et al. J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 2003, 14, 971–979

45 Ribosomal proteins identification using LC/ESI/MS/MS and LC/MALDI/MS/MS
Bodnar et al. J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 2003, 14, 971–979

46 Comparison of LC/ESI/MS and LC/MALDI/MS Spectra

47 Comparison of LC/ESI/MS/MS and LC/MALDI/MS/MS Spectra

48 LC/ESI/MS/MS and LC/MALDI/MS/MS Identified Bovine Ribosomal Proteins

49 Multidimensional Chromatography
Benefit: Sensitive Drawback: Not Robust Yates J.R. (1999) Nature Biotechnol. 17, Yates J.R. (2001) Nature Biotechnol. 19, Nägele et al. (2004) J. Biomol. Tech. 15:143.

50 Schematic flow of multi-dimensional LC-MS
Protein Complex Ion-exchange-HPLC Reverse=phase-HPLC Tandem-MS Database search Peptide sequence Identification of protein Proteolytic degradation

51 1 SCX column 2 RP column 2 micro-flow pumps 10-port valve
Example: Plumbing 2D LC 1 SCX column 2 RP column 2 micro-flow pumps 10-port valve

52 Plumbing Design ESI RP 2 SCX RP 1 WASTE AS Loop Water/ACN Water/Salt
10 9 SCX 1 8 2 7 ESI Water/ACN 3 6 4 5 RP 1 WASTE Water/Salt

53 Sample Loading via Autosampler
AS Loop RP 2 10 9 SCX 1 8 2 ESI 7 Water/ACN 3 6 4 5 RP 1 WASTE Water/Salt

54 Elution - First Batch of Peptides
RP 2 SCX 10 9 1 8 Water/ACN 2 7 ESI 3 6 4 5 RP 1 WASTE Water/Salt

55 Simultaneous Loading – Second Batch
RP 2 SCX 10 9 1 8 Water/ACN 2 7 ESI 3 6 4 5 RP 1 WASTE Water/Salt

56 Simultaneous Loading – Third Batch
RP 2 SCX 10 9 1 8 ACN gradient 2 7 ESI 3 6 4 5 RP 1 WASTE Salt step

57 LC Trace of 2D Separation
[NH4Cl] = 20 mM 40 mM 60 mM 80 mM 100 mM 150 mM

58 LC Trace of 2D Separation
200 mM 250 mM 300 mM 500 mM

59 Proteins Identified - Comparison
Sample 1D 2D A431 Cells 341 864 Shieh et al ASMS 2002 Poster.

60 1-DE MS and 2-D LC-MS analysis of the mouse bronchoalveolar lavage proteome
Y. Guo et al. Proteomics 2005, 5, 4608–4624

61 2D LC/MS Analysis of Membrane Proteins from Breast Cancer Cells
Schematic diagram of membrane and peptide preparation from MCF7 and BT474 cells. Xiang et al. J. Proteome Res. 2004, 3:

62 2D LC/MS Analysis of Membrane Proteins from Breast Cancer Cells
Av. Spectrum interval min. RP18 BPC of 25mM amm formate SCX frac. Xiang et al. J. Proteome Res. 2004, 3:

63 LC-MS Coupling: Benefits
Reduces complexity of mixtures Removes chemical interferences like salts, detergents Improves the ionisation of compounds Increases sensitivity by concentrating the analyte Easy to automated to enable high throughput

64 End


Download ppt "Principles of LC-MS Coupling"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google