A sheathless interface making use of a porous tip has been used for coupling capillary electrophoresis and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. First, effective flow rates using the interface have been characterized. It was found that the interface is capable of generating a stable spray with flow rates ranging from below 10 nL/min to >340 nL/min, enabling its use in either the mass or concentration-sensitive region of the electrospray process. Subsequently, by analyzing peptide mixtures of increasing complexity, we have demonstrated that this platform provides exquisite sensitivity enabling the detection of very low amounts of materials with very high resolving power. Transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP) can also be integrated with this setup to increase the mass loading of the system while maintaining peak efficiency and resolution. Concentration limits of detection in the subnanomolar or nanomolar range can be achieved with or without t-ITP, respectively. The application of a vacuum at the inlet of the separation capillary further allowed the peak capacity of the system to be improved while also enhancing its efficiency. As a final step in this study, it was demonstrated that the intrinsic properties of the interface allows the use of coated noncharged surfaces so that very high peak capacities can be achieved.
Background An unbiased approach of SARS-CoV-2-induced immune dysregulation has not been undertaken so far. We aimed to identify previously unreported immune markers able to discriminate COVID-19 patients from healthy controls and to predict mild and severe disease. Methods An observational, prospective, multicentric study was conducted in patients with confirmed COVID-19: mild/moderate (n=7) and severe (n=19). Immunophenotyping of whole blood leukocytes was performed in patients upon hospital ward or intensive care unit admission and in healthy controls (n=25). Clinically relevant associations were identified through unsupervised analysis. Results Granulocytic (neutrophil, eosinophil and basophil) markers were enriched during COVID-19 and discriminated between mild and severe patients. Increased counts of CD15 +CD16 + neutrophils, decreased granulocytic expression of integrin CD11b, and Th2-related CRTH2 downregulation in eosinophils and basophils established a COVID-19 signature. Severity was associated with the emergence of PDL1 checkpoint expression in basophils and eosinophils. This granulocytic signature was accompanied by monocyte and lymphocyte immunoparalysis. Correlation with validated clinical scores supported pathophysiological relevance. Conclusion Phenotypic markers of circulating granulocytes are strong discriminators between infected and uninfected individuals as well as between severity stages. COVID-19 alters the frequency and functional phenotypes of granulocyte subsets with the emergence of CRTH2 as a disease biomarker.
Sheathless capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-MS), using a porous tip sprayer, is proposed for the first time for highly sensitive metabolic profiling of human urine. A representative metabolite mixture and human urine were used for evaluation of the sheathless CE-MS platform. For test compounds, relative standard deviations (RSDs) for migration times and peak areas were below 2% and 12%, respectively, and an injection volume of only ∼8 nL resulted in detection limits between 11 and 120 nM. Approximately 900 molecular features were detected in human urine by sheathless CE-MS whereas about 300 molecular features were found with classical sheath-liquid CE-MS. This difference can probably be attributed to an improved ionization efficiency and increased sensitivity at low flow-rate conditions. The integration of transient-isotachophoresis (t-ITP) as an in-capillary preconcentration procedure in sheathless CE-MS further resulted in subnanomolar limits of detection for compounds of the metabolite mixture, and more than 1300 molecular features were observed in urine. Compared to the classical CE-MS approaches, the integration of t-ITP combined with the use of a sheathless interface provides up to 2 orders of magnitude sensitivity improvement. Hence, sheathless CE-MS can be used for in-depth metabolic profiling of biological samples, and we anticipate that this approach will yield unique information in the field of metabolomics.
The potential benefits of ultra-low flow electrospray ionization (ESI) for the analysis of phosphopeptides in proteomics was investigated. First, the relative flow dependent ionization efficiency of nonphosphorylated vs multiplyphosphorylated peptides was characterized by infusion of a five synthetic peptide mix with zero to four phophorylation sites at flow rates ranging from 4.5 to 500 nL/min. Most importantly, similar to what was found earlier by Schmidt et al., it has been verified that at flow rates below 20 nL/min the relative peak intensities for the various peptides show a trend toward an equimolar response, which would be highly beneficial in phosphoproteomic analysis. As the technology to achieve liquid chromatography separation at flow rates below 20 nL/min is not readily available, a sheathless capillary electrophoresis-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (CE-ESI-MS) strategy based on the use of a neutrally coated separation capillary was used to develop an analytical strategy at flow rates as low as 6.6 nL/min. An in-line preconcentration technique, namely, transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP), to achieve efficient separation while using larger volume injections (37% of capillary thus 250 nL) was incorporated to achieve even greater sample concentration sensitivities. The developed t-ITP-ESI-MS strategy was then used in a direct comparison with nano-LC-MS for the detection of phosphopeptides. The comparison showed significantly improved phosphopeptide sensitivity in equal sample load and equal sample concentration conditions for CE-MS while providing complementary data to LC-MS, demonstrating the potential of ultra-low flow ESI for the analysis of phosphopeptides in liquid based separation techniques.
A soft stylus microelectrode probe has been developed to carry out scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) of rough, tilted, and large substrates in contact mode. It is fabricated by first ablating a microchannel in a polyethylene terephthalate thin film and filling it with a conductive carbon ink. After curing the carbon track and lamination with a polymer film, the V-shaped stylus was cut thereby forming a probe, with the cross section of the carbon track at the tip being exposed either by UVphotoablation machining or by blade cutting followed by polishing to produce a crescent moon-shaped carbon microelectrode. The probe properties have been assessed by cyclic voltammetry, approach curves, and line scans over electrochemically active and inactive substrates of different roughness. The influence of probe bending on contact mode imaging was then characterized using simple patterns. Boundary element method simulations were employed to rationalize the distance-dependent electrochemical response of the soft stylus probes.Scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) is a scanning probe technique that provides spatially resolved detection of electrochemical and chemical surface reactivity.1,2 Typically, the probe is an amperometric disk-shaped ultramicroelectrode (UME) enclosed in an insulating sheath, e.g. glass. Due to the hemispherical diffusion occurring at the microdisc electrode, a steadystate current can be monitored as a function of the horizontal (x, y) and vertical (z) probe positions. SECM has found many applications ranging from surface reactivity imaging 3-13 to the study of the kinetics of homogeneous and heterogeneous reactions at solid/liquid, gas/liquid, and liquid/liquid interfaces. 14-20 Because the response of a SECM probe can be described by continuum models of mass transport coupled to electrochemical kinetics, quantitative kinetic information can be extracted by comparing experimental and simulated curves in many practically relevant situations. 21-25The response of a SECM probe depends on the surface reactivity of the sample and the distance d between the surface and the active area of the probe electrode. In order to obtain a reactivity image that is not influenced by topography, d must be kept constant. In conventional SECM operations, this is achieved by working on samples with a roughness that is considerably smaller than the radius r T of the UME and by leveling the plane of the sample surface with respect to the x,y-scanning plane of the positioning system. However, this approach becomes inappropriate on rough surfaces of large aspect ratios or when large scan areas (in the mm 2 range) have to be investigated so that leveling becomes a major obstacle. Similar limitations apply when imaging curved samples. This drawback has been recognized for a long time. In the case of a small r T , a constant d can be maintained by combining
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are highly complex proteins that display a wide range of microheterogeneity that requires multiple analytical methods for full structure assessment and quality control. As a consequence, the characterization of mAbs on different levels is particularly product - and time - consuming. This work presents the characterization of trastuzumab sequence using sheathless capillary electrophoresis (referred as CESI) – tandem mass spectrometry (CESI-MS/MS). Using this bottom-up proteomic-like approach, CESI-MS/MS provided 100% sequence coverage for both heavy and light chain via peptide fragment fingerprinting (PFF) identification. The result was accomplished in a single shot, corresponding to the analysis of 100 fmoles of digest. The same analysis also enabled precise characterization of the post-translational hot spots of trastuzumab, used as a representative widely marketed therapeutic mAb, including the structural confirmation of the five major N-glycoforms.
Here we report the complete characterization of the primary structure of a multimeric glycoprotein in a single analysis by capillary electrophoresis (CE) coupled to mass spectrometry (MS). CE was coupled to electrospray ionization tandem MS by means of a sheathless interface. Transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP) was introduced in this work as an electrokinetically based preconcentration technique, allowing injection of up to 25% of the total capillary volume. Characterization was based on an adapted bottom-up proteomic strategy. Using trypsin as the sole proteolytic enzyme and data from a single injection per considered protein, 100% of the amino acid sequences of four different monoclonal antibodies could be achieved. Furthermore, illustrating the effectiveness and overall capabilities of the technique, the results were possible through identification of peptides without tryptic miscleavages or posttranslational modifications, demonstrating the potency of the technique. In addition to full sequence coverages, posttranslational modifications (PTMs) were simultaneously identified, further demonstrating the capacity of this strategy to structurally characterize glycosylations as well as faint modifications such as asparagine deamidation or aspartic acid isomerization. Together with the exquisite detection sensitivity observed, the contributions of both the CE separation mechanism and selectivity were essential to the result of the characterization with regard to that achieved with conventional MS strategies. The quality of the results indicates that recent improvements in interfacing CE-MS coupling, leading to a considerably improved sensitivity, allows characterization of the primary structure of proteins in a robust and faster manner. Taken together, these results open new research avenues for characterization of proteins through MS.
Finite element numerical simulations were carried out in 2D geometries to map the magnetic field and force distribution produced by rectangular permanent magnets as a function of their size and position with respect to a microchannel. A single magnet, two magnets placed in attraction and in repulsion have been considered. The goal of this work is to show where magnetic beads are preferentially captured in a microchannel. These simulations were qualitatively corroborated, in one geometrical case, by microscopic visualizations of magnetic bead plug formation in a capillary. The results show that the number of plugs is configuration dependent with: in attraction, one plug in the middle of the magnets; in repulsion, two plugs near the edges of the magnets; and with a single magnet, a plug close to the center of the magnet. The geometry of the magnets (h and l are the height and length of the magnets respectively) and their relative spacing s has a significant impact on the magnetic flux density. Its value inside a magnet increases with the h/l ratio. Consequently, bar magnets produce larger and more uniform values than flat magnets. The l/s ratio also influences the magnetic force value in the microchannel, both increasing concomitantly for all the configurations. In addition, a zero force zone in the middle appears in the attraction configuration as the l/s ratio increases, while with a single magnet, the number of maxima and minima goes from one to two, producing two focusing zones instead of only one.
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