Journal of Mass Spectrometry, volume 39, issue 8, pages 922-929
Atmospheric pressure chemical ionization and atmospheric pressure photoionization for simultaneous mass spectrometric analysis of microbial respiratory ubiquinones and menaquinones
Roland Geyer
1
,
Aaron D Peacock
1
,
David C. White
1
,
Cory Lytle
2
,
Gary J Van Berkel
3
2
Thermo Electron Corporation, 1400 Northpoint Parkway, Suite 10, West Palm Beach, Florida 33407, USA
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2004-08-03
Journal:
Journal of Mass Spectrometry
scimago Q3
SJR: 0.431
CiteScore: 5.1
Impact factor: 1.9
ISSN: 10765174, 10969888
DOI:
10.1002/jms.670
PubMed ID:
15329844
Spectroscopy
Abstract
An atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI) source and an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) source were compared for the selective detection of microbial respiratory ubiquinone and menaquinone isoprenologues using tandem mass spectrometry. Ionization source- and compound mass-dependent parameters were optimized individually for both sources, using the available quinone standards. Detection levels for the two ion sources were determined with ubiquinone-6 (UQ6) and menaquinone-4 (MK4, vitamin K2) standards using flow injection analysis and selected reaction monitoring (SRM). With APPI the calculated lower limit of detection (LLOD) was 1.7 fmol microl(-1) for UQ6 and 2.2 fmol microl(-1) for MK4 at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3. These LLODs were at least three times lower than with APCI. The selectivity of detection afforded by SRM detection reduced complex mixture analysis to 3 min per sample by eliminating the need for chromatographic separations. The detection method was successfully applied to quinone quantification in a variety of environmental samples and cell cultures. Adequate amounts of respiratory quinones can be extracted and quantified from samples containing as low as 2 x 10(7) cells.
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