AUTOMATED NANO-FLOW ELECTROSPRAY OF MICROLITERS OF SAMPLE
20170345634 · 2017-11-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Daniel J. Orton (Pasco, WA, US)
- Ronald J. Moore (West Richland, WA, US)
- Erin M. Baker (West Richland, WA)
Cpc classification
H01J49/0445
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A system and method for providing sample into an electrospray device such as a mass spectrometer by providing a sample at a near constant flow through a sample delivery tube with a specified dimensionality through an emitter. These dimensions and feed rates result in higher pressures than would exist in the prior art with some of these pressures being greater than 1000 psi. This system enables increased sample throughput of up to 1200 samples per day.
Claims
1. A method for automated sample delivery of a sample into a mass spectrometer comprising the step of directly providing a sample at a preselected feed rate a near constant flow at pressure greater than 50 psi through a sample delivery tube with a specified dimensionality through an emitter.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the sample delivery tube is a capillary has an inner diameter less than 500 microns.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the sample is provided through the sample delivery tube at a feed rate less than 50 micro liters per minute.
4. The method of claim 3 where in the inner diameter is less than 100 microns.
5. The method of claim 4 where in the inner diameter is less than 50 microns.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the feed rate is less than 100 microliters per minute.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein the feed rate is less than 1 microliter per minute.
8. The method of claim 2 wherein the sample is pressurized to at least 1000 psi.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the flow of sample is regulated by at least one valve that regulates the filling of a sample loop by controlling the flow of sample into the capillary.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein two valves interconnected by tubing alternate to form alternating sample loops that feed into the same sample delivery tube.
11. A method for performing electrospray analysis in a mass spectrometer comprising the step of loading samples through an autosampler into an electrospray tip wherein the flow of sample to the electrospray tip exceeds 1000 psi.
12. A system for automated delivery of sample to a mass spectrometer for analysis comprising: a sample loop having a specified dimensionality connected to a valve that provides sample from the sample loop to an emitter through a sample delivery tube, and a pump operably connected to said valve so as to maintain constant flow of the sample through the system despite fluctuations in pressure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0018] The following pages include descriptions and examples of some of the preferred modes of deployment of the present disclosure. It will be clear from this description that the invention is not limited to these illustrated embodiments but that the invention also includes a variety of modifications and embodiments thereto. Therefore the present description should be seen as illustrative and not limiting.
[0019] Electrospray ionization has long benefitted the study of bio-molecules combined with mass spectrometry. Electrospray ionization can be gentle enough to effectively charge proteins without denaturing them. For specific compounds the requirements for stable electrospray can differ greatly in flow rate, acquisition time and instrument voltage. Mass spectrometers can run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, but their effective use is many times limited by requiring an operator to be present at all times when data is acquired. Due to the sensitivity and the increasing speed of analysis of most modern mass spectrometers acquisition times are typically only a few minutes with directly infused samples. More time is typically taken to clean the syringe and lines than for the actual analysis, requiring an operators complete attention. To clear the dead volume, precious sample must typically be sacrificed.
[0020] The following provides a description for automated electrospray that addresses the shortcomings of electrospray ionization for high throughput analysis. Unattended operation, even at the highest throughput options, is possible for more than two days. If analysis times are longer, the unattended operation of the device can be longer. In these described embodiments, the robustness is improved to make such throughput feasible, limiting the cost of consumables and providing more consistent results with low carry over.
[0021] A first embodiment and associated example of use and operation is shown in
[0022] Preferably, the sample delivery tube 10 is a tube having an inner diameter less than 500 microns and the sample is provided through the sample delivery tube 10 at a feed rate less than 50 micro liters per minute. A pump 20 is used to maintain pressure in the system. In other embodiments, various other set ups may be configured to include those tubes wherein the inner diameter is less than 100 microns, or even 50, 20, or even 10 microns. Similarly the feed rates may be varied to be less than 100, 1 or even 0.1 microliters per minute. The arising pressure on the samples during sample flow can typically range from between ambient to 7,250 psi. In some applications an elevated pressure of at least 1000 psi is preferred (typically between 1,000 and 2,000 psi) which is above the structural threshold of most glass syringes used in manual processes.
[0023]
Example 1
[0024]
[0025] In another embodiment an apparatus for automated electrospray was constructed according to the arrangement as set out in
[0026] Various other samples were run and tested in these sample loading configurations to verify the accuracy and precision of the sampling techniques and to ascertain if methods and systems of the present invention had negative impacts of sample reliability or integrity, as others in the prior art would suggest. The short answer is that no such negative consequences were observed. A discussion of these tests and their results follows.
[0027] IMS-MS studies were executed with an in-house built IMS-MS instrument that coupled a 1-m ion mobility separation with an Agilent 6224 TOF MS upgraded to a 1.5 meter flight tube (providing MS resolution of ˜25,000). Ultrahigh resolution characterization of purified extracts form the two sediment types was carried out using a 12 Tesla Bruker SolariX Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometer (MS) located at the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory (EMSL), a Department of Energy-Office of Biological and Environmental Research national user facility in Richland, Wash., USA.
[0028] Samples (originally in methanol) were injected directly into the mass spectrometer and the ion accumulation time was optimized for all samples to account for differences in DOC (dissolved organic carbon) concentration. A standard Bruker electrospray ionization (ESI) source was used to generate negatively charged molecular ions. Whole proteins for the determination of the constant of dissociation (Kd) were filtered using a 10K spin filter (EMD Millipore) and 200 μM ammonium acetate to reduce residual sodium contamination. The samples were brought to a final concentration of 5 μm carbonic anhydrase and a variety of drug concentrations according to the estimated binding efficiency. The IMS-MS data was collected from m/z 200-14000 for each of the ligands. The Benzenesulfonamide, Ethoxzolamide, Acetazolamide, and 4-Carboxy-benzenesulfonamide were each purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis Mo.).
[0029] For the pH experiments, a stock solution of 50 μM ER309 in 200 mM ammonium acetate was utilized for the IMS-MS studies. To perform the pH experiments, the stock solution was diluted to 5 μM with 200 mM ammonium acetate pH adjusted using acetic acid or ammonium hydroxide to reach the desired pH of 3, 7 and 10. The IMS-MS data was collected from m/z 100-3200 for three different pHs (pHs=3, 7, and 10) to understand how the protein changed with pH. This included particularly sensitive analyses such as determination of the constant of dissociation Kd of proteins and ligands requires proteins to be sprayed in native conditions. The results from this testing is shown in
[0030] Experimental conditions for the FT-ICR were as follows: needle voltage, +4.4 kV; Q1 set to 50 m/z; and the heated resistively coated glass capillary operated at 180° C. Ninety-six individual scans were averaged for each sample and internally calibrated using an organic matter homologous series separated by 14 Da (—CH2 groups). The mass measurement accuracy was less than 1 ppm for singly charged ions across a broad m/z range (100-900 m/z). The mass resolution was ˜350K at 339 m/z. Data Analysis software (BrukerDaltonik version 4.2) was used to convert raw spectra to a list of m/z values (“features”) applying FTMS peak picker with a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) threshold set to 7 and absolute intensity threshold to the default value of 100. Chemical formulae were assigned based on the following criteria: S/N>7, and mass measurement error <1 ppm, taking into consideration the presence of C, H, O, N, S and P and excluding other elements.
[0031] The chemical character of all of the data points for each sample spectrum was evaluated on van Krevelen diagrams on the basis of their molar H:C ratios (y-axis) and molar O:C ratios (x-axis). These tests demonstrated that the samples retained their necessary integrity and identification of the major biochemical classes (i.e., lipids, proteins, lignin, carbohydrates, and condensed aromatics) of compounds present in samples was possible.
[0032] To ascertain the effects of sample degradation over time, various Peat soil samples were collected from northern Minnesota at a depth of 75 cm. The water extractable fraction was prepared in triplicates by adding 3 ml of solvent to 300 mg of bulk soil and shaking for 2 h on an Eppendorf Thermomixer in 2 mL capped glass vials. The samples were then removed from the shaker and left to stand before spinning down and pulling off the supernatant to stop the extraction. After the extraction, the supernatant from each replicate was split into three vials. The first vial was then stored in the fridge (at 4° C.), the second vial was stored in the freezer (−20° C.) whereas the third vial was further split into 5 aliquots and each aliquot was stored independently in the freezer (−20° C.). The extracts were then injected directly into the instrument (25 ul) after they were diluted in MeOH to improve ESI efficiency after T0, T1, T2, T3 and T30 days to monitor changes in organic matter composition with time. The ion accumulation time was varied to account for differences in C concentration between samples. The extraction efficiency was estimated to be around 15%. The results of the processing of these samples is shown in
[0033] These results show that utilizing fused silica tubing lowered the internal diameter of the system so as to reduce the diffusion of the sample plug being pushed through the system as to be inconsequential. Thorough washing of the small wetted surface area reduced the carryover to be nearly undetectable in even the most demanding of applications. LCMSnet control software also employed an error response system so that when a pump over pressured due to a plugged line all analyses were stopped, preserving precious sample. This provided further confidence that the system can run unattended overnight without great risk to sample integrity. The contact closure allows for simple deployment to mass spectrometers of all makes and models.
[0034] The described systems and method have been demonstrated to be effective in the rapid delivery of samples with an assortment of source conditions. Experiments have shown robustness in the number of samples per day and consistent performance over many days. These samples are cleanly and consistently delivered to a variety of mass spectrometers and consumables were significantly reduced, thereby reducing cost in materials and intervention by personnel. This configuration continues to be an integral lab operation that provides increased opportunities for the collection of time data from electrospray types of instruments. Looking forward, more samples will provide the opportunity to conduct larger studies with a better understanding of associated error.
[0035] While various preferred embodiments of the invention are shown and described, it is to be distinctly understood that this invention is not limited thereto but may be variously embodied to practice within the scope of the following claims. From the foregoing description, it will be apparent that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.