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Improved accuracy and identification in label-free quantitative proteomics with the OptiSpray Ion Source and separation cartridge with integrated replaceable emitters

Posters | 2025 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | ASMSInstrumentation
LC/HRMS, LC/Orbitrap, LC/MS/MS, LC/MS, Software, LC columns, Consumables
Industries
Proteomics
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Significance of Topic


Label-free quantitative proteomics enables in-depth exploration of protein expression with minimal sample preparation and high sensitivity. Accurate quantification without isotopic or chemical labels is essential for large-scale biological studies, biomarker discovery, and industrial quality control. However, conventional nanoLC-MS systems face challenges in spray stability, reproducibility, and ease of use, which can compromise statistical power and data quality.

Objectives and Overview of Study


This study evaluates a novel automated ion source and integrated cartridge column assembly with replaceable emitters (OptiSpray Ion Source and µPAC Neo 50 cm cartridge) on an Orbitrap Exploris 480 with FAIMS Pro Duo. The goals are to demonstrate improvements in:
  • Peptide quantification precision across high-throughput and long-term acquisitions
  • Protein identification rates under data-independent acquisition (DIA)
  • Ratio accuracy in mixed proteome samples

Methodology and Instrumentation


Peptide digests from HeLa, Escherichia coli, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae standards were analyzed in single- and dual-proteome mixtures. Three LC gradients (9 min, 30 min, 60 min) with corresponding DIA methods were applied in triplicate. Data processing employed Spectronaut, Proteome Discoverer with CHIMERYS, and DIA-NN workflows. QC metrics included peptide coefficient of variation (CV), retention time stability, and accuracy of known spiked ratios over 170 h.

Used Instrumentation


  • Thermo Scientific Vanquish Neo UHPLC System
  • Thermo Scientific Orbitrap Exploris 480 Mass Spectrometer
  • Thermo Scientific FAIMS Pro Duo Interface
  • Thermo Scientific OptiSpray Ion Source with automated emitter positioning
  • Thermo Scientific µPAC Neo 50 cm Column Cartridge with 15 µm tapered-tip replaceable emitter

Main Results and Discussion


Use of the OptiSpray Ion Source, alone or with FAIMS, yielded marked improvements:
  • Spray stability reduced peptide CVs by up to 50% at both high throughput (9 min) and extended gradients (60 min).
  • Median peptide CVs decreased from 16% to 8% for low-abundance peptides and from 6% to 2% for high-abundance peptides.
  • Retention time deviations of standard peptides remained below 1% over 170 h.
  • Log2 abundance ratio error stayed below 10% on average for mixed proteome samples.
  • Protein identification rates increased by 10–15% with FAIMS and OptiSpray compared to conventional EASY-Spray sources.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The integrated cartridge and automated ion source streamline system setup and maintenance, lowering technical barriers. Enhanced reproducibility and precision bolster statistical confidence in quantitative experiments. Improved identification rates support deeper proteome coverage in biomarker research, QA/QC in biopharma, and large-scale systems biology workflows.

Future Trends and Possibilities


Advances may include optimized DIA window overlaps, further integration of gas-phase fractionation, and AI-driven acquisition strategies. The modular cartridge design can facilitate rapid emitter replacement and method scaling. Combining novel ion sources with real-time data analysis tools promises even higher throughput and robustness for clinical and industrial proteomics.

Conclusion


The automated OptiSpray Ion Source with an integrated cartridge emitter assembly delivers significant gains in spray stability, quantitative precision, and protein identification rates. Its compatibility with FAIMS and advanced DIA workflows positions it as a valuable tool for high-fidelity, high-throughput label-free proteomics.

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