Issue 22, 2024

Differentiation of oligosaccharide isomers by direct infusion multidimensional mass spectrometry

Abstract

Oligosaccharides demonstrate many bioactivities with applications in the pharmaceutical, cosmetic, and food industries. They also serve as biomarkers for various diseases including cancer and glycogen storage disorders. These make the structural characterization of oligosaccharides very important. Unfortunately, the structural diversity found in saccharides make their characterization challenging, necessitating the development of sophisticated instrumentation to enable isomer differentiation. Herein, we report the ability of halide (Cl and Br) adducts to enable direct differentiation of oligosaccharide isomers using conventional collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem MS (MS/MS). The halide adducts were generated by direct infusion nano-electrospray ionization (nESI). For the first time, this traditional nESI CID MS/MS platform was used to differentiate stereoisomers of trisaccharides (cellotriose β(1 → 4) and maltotriose α(1 → 4), tetrasaccharides (cellotetraose and maltotetraose), and pentasaccharides (cellopentaose and maltopentaose)). In addition, the MS/MS of halide adducts enabled the differentiation of positional, structural, and linkage isomers from a total of 14 oligosaccharides. The isomer differentiation was realized by the generation of distinct diagnostic fragment ions in CID. We also performed principal component analysis using the entire range of MS/MS fragment ion profiles and found that negative-ion mode halide adduction provided more effective isomer differentiation compared with positive-ion mode sodium adduction. Finally, we demonstrated complex mixture analysis by spiking all 14 oligosaccharides into raw urine, of which we successfully distinguished species based on molecular weight (first dimension) and CID MS/MS fragmentation patterns as the second dimension separation. This work effectively showcases the potential to use direct infusion nESI-MS/MS to characterize synthetic oligosaccharide isomers in unpurified reaction mixture as well as from biofluids for diagnostic purposes.

Graphical abstract: Differentiation of oligosaccharide isomers by direct infusion multidimensional mass spectrometry

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Aug 2024
Accepted
28 Sep 2024
First published
01 Oct 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Analyst, 2024,149, 5504-5517

Differentiation of oligosaccharide isomers by direct infusion multidimensional mass spectrometry

E. Amoah, T. Sahraeian, A. Seth and A. K. Badu-Tawiah, Analyst, 2024, 149, 5504 DOI: 10.1039/D4AN01142B

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