Metabolomic analysis via reversed-phase ion-pairing liquid chromatography coupled to a stand alone orbitrap mass spectrometer. Author Wenyun Lu, Michelle Clasquin, Eugene Melamud, Daniel Amador-Noguez, Amy Caudy, Joshua Rabinowitz Publication Year 2010 Type Journal Article Abstract We present a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method that capitalizes on the mass-resolving power of the orbitrap to enable sensitive and specific measurement of known and unanticipated metabolites in parallel, with a focus on water-soluble species involved in core metabolism. The reversed phase LC method, with a cycle time 25 min, involves a water-methanol gradient on a C18 column with tributylamine as the ion pairing agent. The MS portion involves full scans from 85 to 1000 m/z at 1 Hz and 100,000 resolution in negative ion mode on a stand alone orbitrap ("Exactive"). The median limit of detection, across 80 metabolite standards, was 5 ng/mL with the linear range typically >or=100-fold. For both standards and a cellular extract from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Baker's yeast), the median inter-run relative standard deviation in peak intensity was 8%. In yeast exact, we detected 137 known compounds, whose (13)C-labeling patterns could also be tracked to probe metabolic flux. In yeast engineered to lack a gene of unknown function (YKL215C), we observed accumulation of an ion of m/z 128.0351, which we subsequently confirmed to be oxoproline, resulting in annotation of YKL215C as an oxoprolinase. These examples demonstrate the suitability of the present method for quantitative metabolomics, fluxomics, and discovery metabolite profiling. Keywords Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Kinetics, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization, Metabolome, Metabolomics, Chromatography, Reverse-Phase, Pyroglutamate Hydrolase Journal Anal Chem Volume 82 Issue 8 Pages 3212-21 Date Published 04/2010 Alternate Journal Anal. Chem. Google ScholarBibTeXEndNote X3 XML