1. A Workflow to Perform Targeted Metabolomics at the Untargeted Scale on a Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer
- Author
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Valerie L. Arends, Miriam Sindelar, Michaela Schwaiger-Haber, Gary J. Patti, Bharat Thyagarajan, and Ethan Stancliffe
- Subjects
Environmental Engineering ,QD71-142 ,Untargeted metabolomics ,Computer science ,triple quadrupole mass spectrometry ,Scale (chemistry) ,Selected reaction monitoring ,Orbitrap ,computer.software_genre ,Mass spectrometry ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Article ,law.invention ,Triple quadrupole mass spectrometer ,collision energy conversion ,Workflow ,law ,targeted metabolomics ,Data mining ,high-resolution mass spectrometry ,computer ,Analytical chemistry ,Targeted metabolomics - Abstract
The thousands of features commonly observed when performing untargeted metabolomics with quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) and Orbitrap mass spectrometers often correspond to only a few hundred unique metabolites of biological origin, which is in the range of what can be assayed in a single targeted metabolomics experiment by using a triple quadrupole (QqQ) mass spectrometer. A major benefit of performing targeted metabolomics with QqQ mass spectrometry is the affordability of the instruments relative to high-resolution QTOF and Orbitrap platforms. Optimizing targeted methods to profile hundreds of metabolites on a QqQ mass spectrometer, however, has historically been limited by the availability of authentic standards, particularly for "unknowns" that have yet to be structurally identified. Here, we report a strategy to develop multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) methods for QqQ instruments on the basis of high-resolution spectra, thereby enabling us to use data from untargeted metabolomics to design targeted experiments without the need for authentic standards. We demonstrate that using high-resolution fragmentation data alone to design MRM methods results in the same quantitative performance as when methods are optimized by measuring authentic standards on QqQ instruments, as is conventionally done. The approach was validated by showing that Orbitrap ID-X data can be used to establish MRM methods on a Thermo TSQ Altis and two Agilent QqQs for hundreds of metabolites, including unknowns, without a dependence on standards. Finally, we highlight an application where metabolite profiling was performed on an ID-X and a QqQ by using the strategy introduced here, with both data sets yielding the same result. The described approach therefore allows us to use QqQ instruments, which are often associated with targeted metabolomics, to profile knowns and unknowns at a comprehensive scale that is typical of untargeted metabolomics.
- Published
- 2021