Web Release Date: December 18,
Differentiation of Microorganisms Based on Pyrolysis-Ion Trap Mass Spectrometry Using Chemical Ionization
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831
Received for review March 30, 1998. Accepted November 9, 1998.
Abstract:
The ability to differentiate microorganisms using pyrolysis-ion trap mass spectrometry was demonstrated for five
Gram-negative disease-causing organisms: Brucella
melitensis, Brucella suis, Vibrio cholera, Yersinia
pestis, and Francisella tularensis. Bacterial profiles
were generated for
-irradiated bacterial samples using
pyrolytic methylation and compared for electron ionization
and chemical ionization using several liquid reagents with
increasing proton affinities. Electron ionization combined
with pyrolysis caused extensive fragmentation, resulting
in a high abundance of lower mass ions and diminishing
the diagnostic value of the technique for compound
identification and bacterial profiling. Chemical ionization
reduced the amount of fragmentation due to ionization
while enhancing the molecular ion region of the fatty acids.
As the proton affinity of the reagent increased, the protonated molecular ions of the fatty acids became the
predominant ions observed in the mass spectrum. As a
result, chemical ionization was shown to be more effective
than electron ionization in bacterial profiling. Whereas the
bacteria could be distinguished at the Genera level using
electron ionization, further differentiation to the subspecies level was possible using chemical ionization. The
greatest separation among the five test organisms, in
terms of Euclidean distances, was obtained using ethanol
as the chemical ionization reagent and using pooled
masses representing specific fatty acid biomarkers rather
than total ion profiles.
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