Open Port Probe Sampling Interface for the Direct
Coupling of Biocompatible Solid-Phase Microextraction to Atmospheric
Pressure Ionization Mass Spectrometry
posted on 2017-02-10, 00:00authored byGermán
Augusto Gómez-Ríos, Chang Liu, Marcos Tascon, Nathaly Reyes-Garcés, Don W. Arnold, Thomas R. Covey, Janusz Pawliszyn
In recent years,
the direct coupling of solid phase microextraction
(SPME) and mass spectrometry (MS) has shown its great potential to
improve limits of quantitation, accelerate analysis throughput, and
diminish potential matrix effects when compared to direct injection
to MS. In this study, we introduce the open port probe (OPP) as a
robust interface to couple biocompatible SPME (Bio-SPME) fibers to
MS systems for direct electrospray ionization. The presented design
consisted of minimal alterations to the front-end of the instrument
and provided better sensitivity, simplicity, speed, wider compound
coverage, and high-throughput in comparison to the LC–MS based
approach. Quantitative determination of clenbuterol, fentanyl, and
buprenorphine was successfully achieved in human urine. Despite the
use of short extraction/desorption times (5 min/5 s), limits of quantitation
below the minimum required performance levels (MRPL) set by the world
antidoping agency (WADA) were obtained with good accuracy (≥90%)
and linearity (R2 > 0.99) over the
range
evaluated for all analytes using sample volumes of 300 μL. In-line
technologies such as multiple reaction monitoring with multistage
fragmentation (MRM3) and differential mobility spectrometry
(DMS) were used to enhance the selectivity of the method without compromising
analysis speed. On the basis of calculations, once coupled to high
throughput, this method can potentially yield preparation times as
low as 15 s per sample based on the 96-well plate format. Our results
demonstrated that Bio-SPME-OPP-MS efficiently integrates sampling/sample
cleanup and atmospheric pressure ionization, making it an advantageous
configuration for several bioanalytical applications, including doping
in sports, in vivo tissue sampling, and therapeutic drug monitoring.