Abstract

The influence of the glycosylation site on the fragmentation behavior of 18 flavonoid glycoside standards was studied using positive and negative electrospray ionization mass spectrometry in combination with collision-induced dissociation and tandem mass spectrometry. The glycosylation position is shown to affect the relative abundance of the radical aglycone ions that can be observed in the [M-H]- collision-induced dissociation spectra. In particular, the radical aglycone ions are very abundant for deprotonated flavonol 3-O-glycosides. Collisional activation of the radical aglycone ions produced from positional isomers revealed minor differences: m,nB0- product ions are pronounced for 7-O-glycosides, whereas m,nA0- product ions are relatively more abundant for 4'-O-glycosides. In addition, the ratio between the radical aglycone and the regular aglycone ions in the [M+Na]+ high-energy collision-induced dissociation spectra gives an indication about the glycosylation site. This ion ratio allows the differentiation between flavonoid 3-O- and 7-O-glycosides or can be useful in the comparison of unknown compounds with standards. Unambiguous differentiation between O-glycosylation at the common positions of flavonoid O-glycosides, i.e. the 3-, 4'- and 7-positions, is achieved by collisional activation of sodiated molecules at high collision energy. The presence of a B-ring product ion containing the sugar residue indicates 4'-O-glycosylation, whereas the loss of the B-ring part from the aglycone product ion is characteristic of 3-O-glycosylation and the loss of the B-ring part from both the [M+Na]+ precursor ion and the aglycone product ion points to 7-O-glycosylation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call