The great complexity of biological systems and their environment poses similarly vast challenges for accurate analytical evaluations of their identity, structure and quantity. Post genomic science, has predicted much regarding the static populations of biological systems, but a further challenge for analysis is to test the accuracy of these predictions, as well as provide a better representation of the transient nature of the molecules of life. Accurate measurements of biological systems have wide applications for biological, forensic, biotechnological and healthcare fields. Therefore, the holy grail is to find a technique which can identify and quantify biological molecules with high throughput, sensitivity and robustness, as well evaluate molecular structure(s) in order to understand how the specific molecules interact and function. While wrapping all of these characteristics into one platform may sound difficult, ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) is addressing all of these challenges. Over the last decade, the number of analytical studies utilizing IMS for the evaluation of complex biological and environmental samples has greatly increased. In most cases IMS is coupled with mass spectrometry (IM-MS), but even alone IMS provides the unique capability of rapidly assessing a molecule’s structure, which can be extremely difficult with other techniques. The robustness of the IMS measurement is bourne out by its widespread use in security, environmental and military applications. The multidimensional IM-MS measurements however have been proven to be ever more powerful, as applied to complex mixtures as they enable the evaluation of both the structure and mass of every molecular component in a sample during a single measurement, without the need for continual reference calibration.
Revised: April 14, 2020 |
Published: February 1, 2018
Citation
Barran P., and E.M. Baker. 2018.Editorial Overview: Omics.Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 42.PNNL-SA-134047.doi:10.1016/j.cbpa.2018.02.007