A Multimodal Desorption Electrospray Ionisation Workflow Enabling Visualisation of Lipids and Biologically Relevant Elements in a Single Tissue Section

Author:

Costa Catia1ORCID,De Jesus Janella23,Nikula Chelsea3ORCID,Murta Teresa3,Grime Geoffrey W.1ORCID,Palitsin Vladimir1ORCID,Dartois Véronique4ORCID,Firat Kaya4ORCID,Webb Roger1ORCID,Bunch Josephine3,Bailey Melanie J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Surrey Ion Beam Centre, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK

2. Department of Chemistry, University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK

3. The National Physical Laboratory, Teddington TW11 0LW, UK

4. Center for Discovery and Innovation, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, Nutley, NJ 07110, USA

Abstract

The colocation of elemental species with host biomolecules such as lipids and metabolites may shed new light on the dysregulation of metabolic pathways and how these affect disease pathogeneses. Alkali metals have been the subject of extensive research, are implicated in various neurodegenerative and infectious diseases and are known to disrupt lipid metabolism. Desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI) is a widely used approach for molecular imaging, but previous work has shown that DESI delocalises ions such as potassium (K) and chlorine (Cl), precluding the subsequent elemental analysis of the same section of tissue. The solvent typically used for the DESI electrospray is a combination of methanol and water. Here we show that a novel solvent system, (50:50 (%v/v) MeOH:EtOH) does not delocalise elemental species and thus enables elemental mapping to be performed on the same tissue section post-DESI. Benchmarking the MeOH:EtOH electrospray solvent against the widely used MeOH:H2O electrospray solvent revealed that the MeOH:EtOH solvent yielded increased signal-to-noise ratios for selected lipids. The developed multimodal imaging workflow was applied to a lung tissue section containing a tuberculosis granuloma, showcasing its applicability to elementally rich samples displaying defined structural information.

Funder

EPSRC

Analytical Chemistry Trust Fund

NERC

EPSRC National Research Facility UKNIBC

RADIATE

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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