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Altering Lipid A Precursor Ion Types in the Gas Phase for In-Depth Structural Elucidation via Tandem Mass Spectrometry

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posted on 2025-01-16, 06:43 authored by Hsi-Chun Chao, Scott A. McLuckey
Lipid A, a well-known saccharolipid, acts as the inner lipid–glycan anchor of lipopolysaccharides in Gram-negative bacterial cell membranes and functions as an endotoxin. Its structure is composed of two glucosamines with β(1 → 6) linkages and various fatty acyl and phosphate groups. The lipid A structure can be used for the identification of bacterial species, but its complexity poses significant structural characterization challenges. In this work, we present a comprehensive strategy combining condensed-phase sample preparation, electrospray ionization, and gas-phase ion/ion reactions with tandem mass spectrometry for detailed lipid A structural elucidation. We use proton transfer reactions, charge-inversion reactions, and sequential ion/ion reactions for magnesium transfer to generate targeted lipid A ions. The strategy, established with a synthetic monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA) and known MPLA and diphosphorylated lipid A (DPLA) from Escherichia coli F583, demonstrated that [MPLA – 2H]2–, [MPLA – H], and [MPLA – H + Mg]+ precursor ions offer complementary information for MPLA, while [DPLA – H], [DPLA + H]+, and [DPLA – H + Mg]+ precursor ions provide analogous information for DPLA analysis. We validated the strategy using known lipid A species and also successfully applied this strategy to profile unknown MPLA and DPLA in the same E. coli strain.

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