Publication | Open Access
MS Imaging‐Guided Microproteomics for Spatial Omics on a Single Instrument
41
Citations
14
References
2020
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyAnalytical MicrosystemsBiological Mass SpectrometryBiomedical EngineeringSpatial OmicsAnalytical InstrumentationBioanalysisMass Spectrometry ImagingOmics TechnologySpatial DistributionAnalytical ChemistryProteomicsFast Lipid-based MsiMolecular ImagingBiophysicsChromatographyBiochemistryOmicsMs Imaging‐guided MicroproteomicsBiomedical ImagingMass SpectrometryProtein Mass SpectrometryNative Mass SpectrometryMedicineOmics Integration
Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) allows investigating the spatial distribution of chemical compounds directly in biological tissues. As the analytical depth of MSI is limited, MSI needs to be coupled to more sensitive local extraction-based omics approaches to achieve a comprehensive molecular characterization. For this, it is important to retain the spatial information provided by MSI for follow-up omics studies. It has been shown that regiospecific MSI data can be used to guide a laser microdissection system for ultra-sensitive liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analyses. So far, this combination has required separate and specialized mass spectrometry (MS) instrumentation. Recent advances in dual-source instrumentation, harboring both matrix assisted laser/desorption ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) sources, promise state-of-the-art MSI and liquid-based proteomic capabilities on the same MS instrument. This study demonstrates that such an instrument can offer both fast lipid-based MSI at high mass and high lateral resolution and sensitive LC-MS on local protein extracts from the exact same tissue section.
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