posted on 2022-01-11, 16:13authored byBoris Ucur, Alan T. Maccarone, Shane R. Ellis, Stephen J. Blanksby, Adam J. Trevitt
Understanding how
neutral molecules become protonated during positive-ion
electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry is critically important
to ensure analytes can be efficiently ionized, detected, and unambiguously
identified. The ESI solvent is one of several parameters that can
alter the dominant site of protonation in polyfunctional molecules
and thus, in turn, can significantly change the collision-induced
dissociation (CID) mass spectra relied upon for compound identification.
Ciprofloxacina common fluoroquinolone antibioticis
one such example whereby positive-ion ESI can result in gas-phase
[M + H]+ ions protonated at either the keto-oxygen or the
piperazine-nitrogen. Here, we demonstrate that these protonation isomers
(or protomers) of ciprofloxacin can be resolved by
differential ion mobility spectrometry and give rise to distinctive
CID mass spectra following both charge-directed and charge-remote
mechanisms. Interaction of mobility-selected protomers with methanol
vapor (added via the throttle gas supply) was found to irreversibly
convert the piperazine N-protomer to the keto-O-protomer. This methanol-mediated proton-transport catalysis
is driven by the overall exothermicity of the reaction, which is computed
to favor the O-protomer by 93 kJ mol–1 (in the gas phase). Conversely, gas phase interactions of mobility-selected
ions with acetonitrile vapor selectively depletes the N-protomer ion signal as formation of stable [M + H + CH3CN]+ cluster ions skews the apparent protomer population
ratio, as the O-protomer is unaffected. These findings
provide a mechanistic basis for tuning protomer populations to ensure
faithful characterization of multifunctional molecules by tandem mass
spectrometry.