posted on 2020-09-09, 19:34authored byElizabeth
K. Neumann, Lukasz G. Migas, Jamie L. Allen, Richard M. Caprioli, Raf Van de Plas, Jeffrey M. Spraggins
Low
molecular weight metabolites are essential for defining the
molecular phenotypes of cells. However, spatial metabolomics tools
often lack the sensitivity, specify, and spatial resolution to provide
comprehensive descriptions of these species in tissue. MALDI imaging
mass spectrometry (IMS) of low molecular weight ions is particularly
challenging as MALDI matrix clusters are often nominally isobaric
with multiple metabolite ions, requiring high resolving power instrumentation
or derivatization to circumvent this issue. An alternative to this
is to perform ion mobility separation before ion detection, enabling
the visualization of metabolites without the interference of matrix
ions. Additional difficulties surrounding low weight metabolite visualization
include high resolution imaging, while maintaining sufficient ion
numbers for broad and representative analysis of the tissue chemical
complement. Here, we use MALDI timsTOF IMS to image low molecular
weight metabolites at higher spatial resolution than most metabolite
MALDI IMS experiments (20 μm) while maintaining broad coverage
within the human kidney. We demonstrate that trapped ion mobility
spectrometry (TIMS) can resolve matrix peaks from metabolite signal
and separate both isobaric and isomeric metabolites with different
distributions within the kidney. The added ion mobility data dimension
dramatically increased the peak capacity for spatial metabolomics
experiments. Through this improved sensitivity, we have found >40
low molecular weight metabolites in human kidney tissue, such as argininic
acid, acetylcarnitine, and choline that localize to the cortex, medulla,
and renal pelvis, respectively. Future work will involve further exploring
metabolomic profiles of human kidneys as a function of age, sex, and
race.