TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring the Conformational Landscape of Poly(l-lysine) Dendrimers Using Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry
AU - Benoit, Florian
AU - Wang, Xudong
AU - Dai, Junxiao
AU - Geue, Niklas
AU - England, Richard
AU - Bristow, Anthony
AU - Barran, Perdita
PY - 2024/6/11
Y1 - 2024/6/11
N2 - Ion mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS) measures the mass, size, and shape of ions in the same experiment, and structural information is provided via collision cross-section (CCS) values. The majority of commercially available IM-MS instrumentation relies on the use of CCS calibrants, and here, we present data from a family of poly(l-lysine) dendrimers and explore their suitability for this purpose. In order to test these compounds, we employed three different IM-MS platforms (Agilent 6560 IM-QToF, Waters Synapt G2, and a home-built variable temperature drift tube IM-MS) and used them to investigate six different generations of dendrimers in two buffer gases (helium and nitrogen). Each molecule gives a highly discrete CCS distribution suggestive of single conformers for each m/z value. The
DTCCS
N
2
values of this series of molecules (molecular weight: 330-16,214 Da) range from 182 to 2941 Å
2, which spans the CCS range that would be found by many synthetic molecules including supramolecular compounds and many biopolymers. The CCS values for each charge state were highly reproducible in day-to-day analysis on each instrument, although we found small variations in the absolute CCS values between instruments. The rigidity of each dendrimer was probed using collisionally activated and high-temperature IM-MS experiments, where no evidence for a significant CCS change ensued. Taken together, this data indicates that these polymers are candidates for CCS calibration and could also help to reconcile differences found in CCS measurements on different instrument geometries.
AB - Ion mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS) measures the mass, size, and shape of ions in the same experiment, and structural information is provided via collision cross-section (CCS) values. The majority of commercially available IM-MS instrumentation relies on the use of CCS calibrants, and here, we present data from a family of poly(l-lysine) dendrimers and explore their suitability for this purpose. In order to test these compounds, we employed three different IM-MS platforms (Agilent 6560 IM-QToF, Waters Synapt G2, and a home-built variable temperature drift tube IM-MS) and used them to investigate six different generations of dendrimers in two buffer gases (helium and nitrogen). Each molecule gives a highly discrete CCS distribution suggestive of single conformers for each m/z value. The
DTCCS
N
2
values of this series of molecules (molecular weight: 330-16,214 Da) range from 182 to 2941 Å
2, which spans the CCS range that would be found by many synthetic molecules including supramolecular compounds and many biopolymers. The CCS values for each charge state were highly reproducible in day-to-day analysis on each instrument, although we found small variations in the absolute CCS values between instruments. The rigidity of each dendrimer was probed using collisionally activated and high-temperature IM-MS experiments, where no evidence for a significant CCS change ensued. Taken together, this data indicates that these polymers are candidates for CCS calibration and could also help to reconcile differences found in CCS measurements on different instrument geometries.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85194903214&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.4c00099
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.4c00099
M3 - Article
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 96
SP - 9390
EP - 9398
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 23
ER -