Sascha Knecht
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saschaxknecht.bsky.social
Sascha Knecht
@saschaxknecht.bsky.social
Analytical Scientist #Proteomics & #Metabolomics | interested in mass spectrometry-based secretomics, proteomics & drug discovery
Proteomics and weather – not a combo you'd expect, right? But it turns out, even mass spectrometers feel the pressure... literally. 🌡️ We found that daily air pressure changes cause ion mobility drifts, leading to increased missing values and inconsistent peptide quantification.

Weather’s going wild, and now your mass spec data’s a mess too?

Coindidence? Nope!

We reveal how weather-driven air pressure fluctuations impact diaPASEF-based high troughput proteomics - and how to fix it!

Check out our new paper! #diaPASEF #Weatheromics

pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Impact of Local Air Pressure on Ion Mobilities and Data Consistency in diaPASEF-Based High Throughput Proteomics
Data-independent acquisition (DIA) on ion mobility mass spectrometers enables deep proteome coverage and high data completeness in large-scale proteomics studies. For advanced acquisition schemes such as parallel accumulation serial fragmentation-based DIA (diaPASEF) stability of ion mobility (1/K0) over time is crucial for consistent data quality. We found that minor changes in environmental air pressure systematically affect the vacuum pressure in the TIMS analyzer, causing ion mobility shifts. By comparing experimental ion mobilities with historical weather data, we attributed observed drifts to fluctuations in the ground air pressure. Moderate air pressure changes of e.g. fifteen mbar induce ion mobility shifts of 0.025 Vs/cm2. These drifts negatively impact peptide quantification across consecutively acquired samples due to drift-dependent abundance changes and increased missing values for ions located at the boundaries of diaPASEF isolation windows, which cannot be corrected by postprocessing. To address this, we applied an in-batch mobility autocalibration feature on a run-wise basis, leading to full elimination of ion mobility drifts.
pubs.acs.org
January 25, 2025 at 8:59 AM