Abstract

The analysis of peptide mixtures from urine and plasma samples using bare (uncapped) SiO2 nanoparticles (NPs) with atmospheric-pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (AP-MALDI-MS) has been reported. The method was based on the adsorption of positively charged peptides on the surface of negatively charged SiO2 NPs through the electrostatic force of attraction. The adsorption on the surface of SiO2 NPs caused enhancement of ionization efficiency of analytes and subsequently increased the signal intensity of peptides. Maximum signal intensity was obtained at optimized concentration of SiO2 NPs and pH of the aqueous solution. The limits of detection (LODs) obtained for different peptides in deionized water with and without using SiO2 NPs were in the range 4.7-360 nM and 0.1-18.0 microM, respectively. The sensitivity of the proposed method was 21-53-fold better than conventional use of AP-MALDI-MS. In addition, linearity in the range 9.5-95 nM was obtained for the peptide angiotensin-II in deionized water with a correlation of estimation of 0.992 using an internal standard. The proposed method provided a simple way to facilitate the ionization of peptides, reduce sample complexity and increase the tolerance to salts and surfactants in the analysis of biological samples. The applicability of the present method was also demonstrated in the real-world sample analysis of aminothiols and lysozyme using MALDI-time-of-flight (TOF)-MS.

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