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Featured researches published by Martin Raymond Green.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Development and Application of Ultra-Performance Liquid Chromatography-TOF MS for Precision Large Scale Urinary Metabolic Phenotyping

Matthew R. Lewis; Jake T. M. Pearce; Konstantina Spagou; Martin Raymond Green; Anthony C. Dona; Ada H. Y. Yuen; Mark David; David J. Berry; Katie Chappell; Verena Horneffer-van der Sluis; Rachel Shaw; Simon Lovestone; Paul Elliott; John P. Shockcor; John C. Lindon; Olivier Cloarec; Zoltan Takats; Elaine Holmes; Jeremy K. Nicholson

To better understand the molecular mechanisms underpinning physiological variation in human populations, metabolic phenotyping approaches are increasingly being applied to studies involving hundreds and thousands of biofluid samples. Hyphenated ultra-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS) has become a fundamental tool for this purpose. However, the seemingly inevitable need to analyze large studies in multiple analytical batches for UPLC-MS analysis poses a challenge to data quality which has been recognized in the field. Herein, we describe in detail a fit-for-purpose UPLC-MS platform, method set, and sample analysis workflow, capable of sustained analysis on an industrial scale and allowing batch-free operation for large studies. Using complementary reversed-phase chromatography (RPC) and hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) together with high resolution orthogonal acceleration time-of-flight mass spectrometry (oaTOF-MS), exceptional measurement precision is exemplified with independent epidemiological sample sets of approximately 650 and 1000 participant samples. Evaluation of molecular reference targets in repeated injections of pooled quality control (QC) samples distributed throughout each experiment demonstrates a mean retention time relative standard deviation (RSD) of <0.3% across all assays in both studies and a mean peak area RSD of <15% in the raw data. To more globally assess the quality of the profiling data, untargeted feature extraction was performed followed by data filtration according to feature intensity response to QC sample dilution. Analysis of the remaining features within the repeated QC sample measurements demonstrated median peak area RSD values of <20% for the RPC assays and <25% for the HILIC assays. These values represent the quality of the raw data, as no normalization or feature-specific intensity correction was applied. While the data in each experiment was acquired in a single continuous batch, instances of minor time-dependent intensity drift were observed, highlighting the utility of data correction techniques despite reducing the dependency on them for generating high quality data. These results demonstrate that the platform and methodology presented herein is fit-for-use in large scale metabolic phenotyping studies, challenging the assertion that such screening is inherently limited by batch effects. Details of the pipeline used to generate high quality raw data and mitigate the need for batch correction are provided.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

High-Pressure Ozone-Induced Dissociation for Lipid Structure Elucidation on Fast Chromatographic Timescales

Berwyck L. J. Poad; Martin Raymond Green; Jayne M. Kirk; Nick Tomczyk; Todd W. Mitchell; Stephen J. Blanksby

Ozone-induced dissociation (OzID) is a novel ion activation technology that exploits the gas-phase reaction between mass-selected ions and ozone inside a mass spectrometer to assign sites of unsaturation in complex lipids. Since it was first demonstrated [ Thomas et al. Anal. Chem. 2008 , 80 , 303 ], the method has been widely deployed for targeted lipid structure elucidation but its application to high throughput and liquid chromatography-based workflows has been limited due to the relatively slow nature of the requisite ion-molecule reactions that result in long ion-trapping times and consequently low instrument duty cycle. Here, the implementation of OzID in a high-pressure region, the ion-mobility spectrometry cell, of a contemporary quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer is described. In this configuration, a high number density of ozone was achieved and thus abundant and diagnostic OzID product ions could be observed even on the timescale of transmission through the reaction region (ca. 20-200 ms), representing a 50-1000-fold improvement in performance over prior OzID implementations. Collisional activation applied prereaction was found to yield complementary and structurally informative product ions arising from ozone- and collision-induced dissociation. Ultimately, the compatibility of this implementation with contemporary ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography is demonstrated with the resulting hyphenated approach showing the ability to separate and uniquely identify isomeric phosphatidylcholines that differ only in their position(s) of unsaturation.


Analytical Chemistry | 2018

Extreme Ultraviolet Radiation: A Means of Ion Activation for Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Alexandre Giuliani; Jonathan P. Williams; Martin Raymond Green

Tandem mass spectrometry has long been established as a corner stone of analytical and structural chemistry. Fast radical-directed dissociation, produced by electron-transfer and electron-capture dissociation (ETD and ECD) has been shown to provide important complementary information to collision-induced dissociation (CID). We report the first application of extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) lamps to tandem mass spectrometry. These discharge lamps are versatile, robust, and low-cost sources of energetic photons (40-80 nm). The coupling of the discharge lamp with a Waters Synapt G2-Si Q-ToF mass spectrometer is achieved through a specific trapping scheme in the TriWave region of the instrument, allowing efficient irradiation of the precursor ions. Rich radical-directed dissociation was produced for a number of model compounds, providing unique, complementary information to existing dissociation techniques.


Archive | 2012

Ion trap with spatially extended ion trapping region

Kevin Giles; Martin Raymond Green; Daniel James Kenny; David J. Langridge; Jason Lee Wildgoose


Archive | 2013

Excitation of Reagent Molecules Withn a RF Confined Ion Guide or Ion Trap to Perform Ion Molecule, Ion Radical or Ion-Ion Interaction Experiments

Martin Raymond Green; Jeffery Mark Brown


Archive | 2012

Ion Mobility Separator with Variable Effective Length

Martin Raymond Green; David J. Langridge; Jason Lee Wildgoose


Archive | 2009

Linear ion trap

Martin Raymond Green; Daniel James Kenny; David J. Langridge; Jason Lee Wildgoose


Archive | 2011

Asymmetric Field Ion Mobility in a Linear Geometry Ion Trap

Martin Raymond Green; Kevin Giles; David J. Langridge


Archive | 2010

Ion population control device for a mass spectrometer

Martin Raymond Green; Daniel James Kenny; Jason Lee Wildgoose


Archive | 2012

Method Of Deadtime Correction in Mass Spectrometry

Keith Richardson; Richard Denny; Martin Raymond Green; Jason Lee Wildgoose

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