ac7b05117_si_001.pdf (1.64 MB)
Download fileCollision Cross Section (CCS) Database: An Additional Measure to Characterize Steroids
journal contribution
posted on 2018-03-12, 00:00 authored by Maykel Hernández-Mesa, Bruno Le Bizec, Fabrice Monteau, Ana M. García-Campaña, Gaud Dervilly-PinelIon
mobility spectrometry enhances the performance characteristics
of liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry workflows intended
to steroid profiling by providing a new separation dimension and a
novel characterization parameter, the so-called collision cross section
(CCS). This work proposes the first CCS database for 300 steroids
(i.e., endogenous, including phase I and phase II metabolites, and
exogenous synthetic compounds), which involves 1080 ions and covers
the CCS of 127 androgens, 84 estrogens, 50 corticosteroids, and 39
progestagens. This large database provides information related to
all the ionized species identified for each steroid in positive electrospray
ionization mode as well as for estrogens in negative ionization mode.
CCS values have been measured using nitrogen as drift gas in the ion
mobility cell. Generally, direct correlation exists between mass-to-charge
ratio (m/z) and CCS because both
are related parameters. However, several steroids mainly steroid glucuronides
and steroid esters have been characterized as more compact or elongated
molecules than expected. In such cases, CCS results in additional
relevant information to retention time and mass spectral data for
the identification of steroids. Moreover, several isomeric steroid
pairs (e.g., 5β-androstane-3,17-dione and 5α-androstane-3,17-dione)
have been separated based on their CCS differences. These results
indicate that adding the CCS to databases in analytical workflows
increases selectivity, thus improving the confidence in steroids analysis.
Consequences in terms of identification and quantification are discussed.
Quality criteria and a construction of an interlaboratory reproducibility
approach are also reported for the obtained CCS values. The CCS database
described here is made publicly available.