作者
Zhiwei Lü,Xinyue Liu,Xuejiao Li,Chuanjia Zhai,Yulian Shi,Xiaoyan Gao
摘要
Profiling of new modified nucleosides from urine plays an important role in exploring biomarkers for cancer. However, limitations from the nature of the compound, bio-sample, instrumentation, and analytical method pose great challenges to achieving a comprehensive analysis of urinary nucleosides. Herein, a method of BH+/MH+-matching (BH+, protonated nucleobase ion; MH+, protonated precursor ion) was developed to discover novel modified nucleosides from human urine samples based on solid phase extraction targeted toward specific modified nucleosides combined with ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with dual-mass spectrometry platforms. Firstly, nucleosides containing 2,3-diol structure on ribose were effectively enriched by PBA (Phenylboronic Acid) cartridges. Secondly, a novel method, "BH+/MH+-matching" was established to achieve rapid screening of modified nucleosides. Based on the in-source fragmentation pattern of nucleosides, a series of putative modified nucleosides were rationally designed and characterized by matching the daughter ion BH+ and its parent ion MH+ in UPLC-MSE spectra. Finally, as a complement to UPLC Q-TOF/MS, UPLC Q-Trap/MS was employed to validate the structure of putative compounds by MRM-IDA-EPI mode. Using the strategy, 12 new cis-diol-containing nucleoside analogs were successfully characterized, which were formed by modified base (m1A, m6A, m2,2,7G, ac4C) and modified ribose containing C5'-O-formylation or C5'-O-methylation. Taken together, the results demonstrated our strategy could efficiently support the rapid discovery of cis-diol-containing nucleosides with modifications on either ribose or base moiety (or both), which exhibited a promising perspective in the future application of biochemical analysis and clinical diagnosis.