Improvement of throughput and charge assignment accuracy in Orbitrap-based charge detection mass spectrometry with proton transfer charge reduction

Posters | 2026 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | ASMSInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/Orbitrap, LC/HRMS
Industries
Proteomics
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Improving Orbitrap-based Charge Detection Mass Spectrometry (CDMS) Through Proton Transfer Charge Reduction (PTCR)



Significance of the topic


Charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) directly measures m/z and the integer charge of single ions, enabling unambiguous mass determination for large, heterogeneous biomolecules. However, CDMS throughput and charge-assignment reliability are limited when analyte ions occupy a narrow, congested low m/z region: Automatic Ion Control (AIC) limits how many ions can be sampled per acquisition to avoid multi-ion events, and charge misassignments produce large mass errors. Integrating gas-phase charge-reduction chemistry (PTCR) prior to Orbitrap CDMS can redistribute ions to higher m/z, reduce spectral congestion, and thereby improve sampling efficiency, sensitivity for high-mass fragments, and charge-determination accuracy. These improvements are important for top-down proteomics, native MS, and analysis of intact macromolecular assemblies where heterogeneity and high m/z complexity are common.

Objectives and study overview


  • Demonstrate that PTCR applied before Orbitrap-based CDMS increases the number of ions sampled per spectrum and raises the fraction of confidently charge-assigned ions.
  • Quantify gains in detection of high-mass fragment ions and resultant improvements in top-down proteoform sequence coverage using bovine carbonic anhydrase II (bCA II) as a model.
  • Assess how PTCR affects charge-assignment algorithms, with emphasis on the central-limit method used for unresolved isotope distributions.

Methodology and instrumentation


  • Sample: Bovine carbonic anhydrase II (bCA II) prepared by buffer exchange into 200 µM ammonium acetate and diluted 100-fold from a 1 mg/mL stock.
  • Instrument platform: Thermo Scientific Orbitrap Apex Tribrid mass spectrometer equipped with Direct Mass Technology (DMT) CDMS capability, ETD, and PTCR reagent ion sources. Heated electrospray ionization (HESI) produced positive analyte ions; built-in negative ion source generated ETD (fluoranthene) and PTCR (perfluoroperhydrophenanthrene) reagent ions. Quadrupole isolation and HCD fragmentation were used as appropriate.
  • Acquisition strategy: Precursor envelope centered at m/z ~1002 (~29+ charge state) was isolated with a 4 Th window, ions were accumulated to 150% of the AIC target, reacted with ETD reagent for 1.25 ms, subjected to HCD at 25% normalized collision energy, and optionally exposed to PTCR (reported experiments used a 12 ms PTCR step; a 3 ms PTCR step was examined for charge-assignment effects). CDMS transients were recorded in the frequency domain and processed with STORIboard and Proteoform Studio.
  • Data processing: Stringent ion filtering criteria were applied to reduce false positives (example thresholds: R2 ≥ 0.90, minimum duration and timing constraints, S/N threshold ~1, voting/binning parameters). Charge assignment compared a voting algorithm (high accuracy for separable envelopes) and a central-limit algorithm (used for unresolved distributions).

Main results and discussion


  • Increased ion sampling and charge assignments: Across 1,600 spectra, datasets without PTCR yielded ~1.85 million ion signals with 111,949 confidently charge-assigned ions. With PTCR, ~2.82 million ion signals were recorded and 312,376 ions were charge-assigned — an ~2.8-fold increase in charge-assigned ions under identical acquisition counts.
  • Redistribution to higher m/z and reduced congestion: PTCR shifted ions into a broader, higher m/z range, lowering local signal density in the low m/z region. This allowed longer injection windows under AIC control and increased the number of single-ion events sampled per acquisition without raising multi-ion overlap risk.
  • Improved detection of high-mass fragments: High-mass, highly charged fragment ions that competed with abundant low-mass species in the congested low m/z region became detectable after PTCR. Comparative spectra showed substantial signal gain for high-mass fragments when PTCR was applied; fragment signal gain increased systematically with fragment mass, improving near-terminal fragment coverage driven by high-mass products.
  • Sequence coverage gains: For bCA II proteoforms analyzed over 1,600 spectra, sequence coverage without PTCR ranged from 21.2% to 56.2%; with PTCR coverage increased to 39.0%–82.9%. The largest improvements localized near protein termini and were attributable to detection of high-mass fragments.
  • Longer ion lifetimes: Charge-reduced ions exhibited lower kinetic energy and fewer collisional losses, translating to longer analyzer lifetimes and improved detection probability in CDMS transients.
  • Enhanced charge assignment accuracy: Redistribution decreased interference from heterogeneous species and improved performance of charge-determination algorithms. As an example, an isolated precursor envelope containing two proteoforms centered at 29.05 kDa (88.63%) and 30.00 kDa (11.47%) was analyzed. The central-limit algorithm assigned only 15.55% of ions to the 29.05 kDa species without PTCR but 57.56% after a 3 ms PTCR step, demonstrating a marked improvement in robustness of the central-limit approach when spectra are decongested by PTCR.
  • Filtering and quality control: Application of rigorous temporal, S/N and voting-based filters retained the majority of candidate ion signals while removing likely false positives; reported filtering removed a substantial fraction of raw events but preserved a higher absolute number of charge-assigned ions in the PTCR datasets.

Benefits and practical applications of the method


  • Higher throughput: Increasing ions per spectrum reduces the number of acquisitions required to reach statistically robust ion counts for confident mass measurements, shortening overall analysis time for top-down and native MS experiments.
  • Improved sensitivity for high-mass fragments: PTCR enables detection of fragments that would otherwise be suppressed in congested m/z regions, improving proteoform characterization and mapping of near-terminal sequence regions.
  • Greater confidence in charge assignment: Especially for heterogeneous samples and cases where isotope resolution is poor, PTCR makes central-limit and other algorithms more reliable, reducing mass-assignment errors.
  • Compatibility with existing workflows: PTCR is implemented as a brief gas-phase reaction step prior to Orbitrap injection and integrates with established fragmentation schemes (ETD, HCD, EThcD), making it straightforward to adopt on platforms that support reagent-ion chemistry.

Future trends and potential applications


  • Optimization of PTCR conditions: Systematic tuning of reagent-ion types, reaction times, and AIC thresholds could further increase throughput and minimize side reactions or excessive neutralization for different analyte classes.
  • Algorithmic co-development: Development of charge-assignment and filtering algorithms explicitly designed for PTCR-decongested CDMS data could further reduce false positives and exploit the larger ion counts per spectrum.
  • Extension to larger assemblies: Applying PTCR-enabled CDMS to very large protein complexes, viral particles, or heterogeneous biotherapeutics could provide improved mass characterization where ensemble MS fails.
  • Hybrid approaches: Combining PTCR with alternative ion-manipulation strategies (e.g., ion mobility or complementary ion/ion chemistries) may provide multi-dimensional separation that further boosts CDMS performance for complex samples.

Conclusion


Integrating proton transfer charge reduction with Orbitrap-based CDMS substantially mitigates spectral congestion by redistributing ions to higher m/z regions. This enables more ions per acquisition under AIC control, increases the number of confidently charge-assigned ions (~2.8-fold in the reported bCA II study), improves detection of high-mass fragments, and enhances sequence coverage in top-down proteomics. Importantly, PTCR markedly improves the performance of charge-assignment algorithms such as the central-limit method for heterogeneous envelopes. Overall, PTCR-augmented CDMS offers a practical route to higher-throughput, higher-sensitivity, and more reliable mass measurements for large and heterogeneous biomolecular systems.

Used instrumentation


  • Thermo Scientific Orbitrap Apex Tribrid mass spectrometer with Direct Mass Technology (DMT) CDMS capability.
  • Built-in negative reagent-ion source for ETD (fluoranthene) and PTCR (perfluoroperhydrophenanthrene).
  • Heated electrospray ionization (HESI) for analyte generation; quadrupole isolation; HCD and ETD fragmentation modalities; data processed with STORIboard and Proteoform Studio.

Reference


  1. Fuerstenau SD, Benner WH. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom. 1995;9:1528–1538.
  2. Stephenson JL, McLuckey SA. J Am Chem Soc. 1996;118(31):7390–7397.
  3. Kafader JO, Durbin KR, Melani RD, Des Soye BJ, Schachner LF, Senko MW, Compton PD, Kelleher NL. J Proteome Res. 2020;19(3):1346–1350.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Proton transfer charge reduction (PTCR)
Proton transfer charge reduction (PTCR)
2021|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
APPLICATION NOTE 74160 Proton transfer charge reduction (PTCR) improves spectral matching and sequence coverage in middle-down analysis of monoclonal antibodies Luca Fornelli,1 Ryan N. Oates,1 Kristina Srzentić,2 Christopher Mullen,3 John E. P. Syka,3 and Romain Huguet3 University of Oklahoma, Norman,…
Key words
ptcr, ptcretd, etdorbitrap, orbitrapproduct, production, ionmab, mabions, ionsmass, masscoverage, coveragecharge, chargesequence, sequencecomplementary, complementarymiddle, middlereduction, reductionthermo
Decipher intricate glycoproteins using data-independent acquisition-proton transfer charge reduction and native top-down mass spectrometry
Technical note | 003497 Structural biology Decipher intricate glycoproteins using data-independent acquisition-proton transfer charge reduction and native top-down mass spectrometry Authors Introduction Weijing Liu, Yuqi Shi, Christopher Mullen, The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic underscores the urgent need for rapid viral glycoprotein Julian…
Key words
ptcr, ptcrhfet, hfetdia, diamass, massterminal, terminalnative, nativecharge, chargecpgrirhfkv, cpgrirhfkvsvgaaagpvvpp, svgaaagpvvpptvvqp, tvvqpterminus, terminusglycosylated, glycosylatedtop, topdown, downisolation
Thermo Scientific Orbitrap Eclipse Tribrid mass spectrometer
Thermo Scientific Orbitrap Eclipse Tribrid mass spectrometer
2020|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Brochures and specifications
Go beyond today’s discovery Orbitrap Eclipse Tribrid mass spectrometer Go beyond today’s discovery When complex analytical questions require a definitive answer, you need a powerful and versatile solution that will allow you to accurately resolve subtle differences, distinguish the right…
Key words
ptcr, ptcrlll, lllsearch, searchsps, spsreal, realprotein, proteinproteoforms, proteoformsnative, nativellll, llllcell, celltribrid, tribridligand, ligandfaims, faimsllllllll, llllllllmass
Comparison of standard vs high-field Orbitrap mass analyzer for charge detection mass spectrometry applications
Comparison of standard vs high-field Orbitrap mass analyzer for charge detection mass spectrometry applications Tobias P. Wörner1, Dmitry Grinfeld1, Alexander A. Makarov1 1Thermo Fisher Scientific, Bremen, Germany Abstract Results Purpose: To compare standard and high-field Thermo Scientific Orbitrap mass analyzers…
Key words
field, fieldcentroiding, centroidinguhmr, uhmrcharge, chargeanalyzer, analyzersided, sidedmass, massion, iontransient, transientorbitrap, orbitrapnoise, noisesingle, singlecomparison, comparisonshorter, shorterhigh
Other projects
GCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
FacebookX (Twitter)LinkedInYouTube
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike