RationaleFree fatty acids and lipid classes containing fatty acid esters are major components of lipidome. In the absence of a chemical derivatization step, FA anions do not yield all of the structural information that may be of interest under commonly used collision‐induced dissociation (CID) conditions. A line of work that avoids condensed‐phase derivatization takes advantage of gas‐phase ion/ion chemistry to charge invert FA anions to an ion type that provides the structural information of interest using conventional CID. This work was motivated by the potential for significant improvement in overall efficiency for obtaining FA chain structural information. MethodsA hybrid triple quadrupole/linear ion‐trap tandem mass spectrometer that has been modified to enable the execution of ion/ion reaction experiments was used to evaluate the use of 4,4′,4″‐tri‐tert‐butyl‐2,2′:6′,2″‐terpyridine (ttb‐Terpy) as the ligand in divalent magnesium complexes for charge inversion of FA anions. ResultsMg(ttb‐Terpy)22+complexes provide significantly improved efficiency in producing structurally informative products from FA ions relative to Mg(Terpy)22+complexes, as demonstrated for straight‐chain FAs, branched‐chain FAs, unsaturated FAs, and cyclopropane‐containing FAs. It was discovered that most of the structurally informative fragmentation from [FA‐H + Mg(ttb‐Terpy)]+results from the loss of a methyl radical from the ligand followed by radical‐directed dissociation (RDD), which stands in contrast to the charge‐remote fragmentation (CRF) believed to be operative with the [FA‐H + Mg(Terpy)]+ions. ConclusionsThis work demonstrates that a large fraction of product ions from the CID of ions of the form [FA‐H + Mg(ttb‐Terpy)]+are derived from RDD of the FA backbone, with a very minor fraction arising from structurally uninformative dissociation channels. This ligand provides an alternative to previously used ligands for the structural characterization of FAs via CRF.
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Charge inversion under plasma-nanodroplet reaction conditions excludes Fischer esterification for unsaturated fatty acids: a chemical approach for type II isobaric overlap
Direct infusion ionization methods provide the highest throughput strategy for mass spectrometry (MS) analysis of low-volume samples. But the trade-off includes matrix effects, which can significantly reduce analytical performance. Herein, we present a novel chemical approach to tackle a special type of matrix effect, namely type II isobaric overlap. We focus on detailed investigation of a nanodroplet-based esterification chemistry for differentiating isotopologue [M + 2] signal due to unsaturated fatty acid (FA) from the monoisotopic signal from a saturated FA. The method developed involves the online fusion of nonthermal plasma with charged nanodroplets, enabling selective esterification of saturated FAs. We discovered that unsaturated FAs undergo spontaneous intramolecular reaction via a novel mechanism based on a carbocation intermediate to afford a protonated lactone moiety (resonance stabilized cyclic carbonium ion), whose mass is the same as the original protonated unsaturated FA. Therefore, the monoisotopic signal from any saturated FA can be selectively shifted away from the mass-to-charge position where the isobaric interference occurs to enable effective characterization by MS. The mechanism governing the spontaneous intramolecular reactions for unsaturated FAs was validated with DFT calculations, experimentation with standards, and isotope labeling. This novel insight achieved via the ultrafast plasma-nanodroplet reaction environment provides a potentially useful synthetic pathway to achieve catalyst-free lactone preparation. Analytically, we believe the performance of direct infusion MS can be greatly enhanced by combining our approach with prior sample enrichment steps for applications in biomedicine and food safety. Also, combination with portable mass spectrometers can improve the efficiency of field studies since front-end separation is not possible under such conditions
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- Award ID(s):
- 2305057
- PAR ID:
- 10509530
- Publisher / Repository:
- Royal Society of Chemistry
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Chemical Science
- Volume:
- 15
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 2041-6520
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 914 to 922
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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