Abstract

Many fundamental questions of astrophysics, biochemistry, and geology rely on the ability to accurately and precisely measure the mass and abundance of isotopes. Taken a step further, the capacity to perform such measurements on intact molecules provides insights into processes in diverse biological systems. Described here is the coupling of a combined atomic and molecular (CAM) ionization source, the liquid sampling-atmospheric pressure glow discharge (LS-APGD) microplasma, with a commercially available ThermoScientific Fusion Lumos mass spectrometer. Demonstrated for the first time is the ionization and isotopically resolved fingerprinting of a long-postulated, but never mass-spectrometrically observed, bi-metallic complex Hg:Se-cysteine. Such a complex has been implicated as having a role in observations of Hg detoxification by selenoproteins/amino acids. Demonstrated as well is the ability to mass spectrometrically-resolve the geochronologically important isobaric 87Sr and 87Rb species (Δm ~ 0.3mDa, mass resolution m/Δm ≈ 1,700,000). The mass difference in this case reflects the beta-decay of the 87Rb to the stable Sr isotope. These two demonstrations highlight what may be a significant change in bioinorganic and atomic mass spectrometry, with impact expected across a broad spectrum of the physical, biological, and geological sciences. Graphical Abstract "".

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