Mass spectrometry imaging makes possible simultaneous measurement of a
large number of biomolecules of lipids, peptides, proteins, etc. from the
same sample. Of special interest are ambient ionization techniques that can
be carried out at room temperature in air. We report the development of a
new type of ambient mass spectrometry named laser desorption ionization
droplet delivery mass spectrometry (LDIDD-MS). It utilizes a pulsed laser
for desorption of molecules from cells or tissue substrates. The desorbed ions
are picked up and delivered with directed sprayed liquid droplets on the
laser-irradiated region to a mass spectrometer. By translating desorption region
on XY moving stage, two-dimensional images of the desorbed/ionized ions can
be formed. As the region of desorption/ionization of LDIDD-MS is spatially
limited to the laser beam spot size, the spatial resolution can be ideally reduced
to several microns.
We obtained spatial resolution as low as 2.4 mm in microcontacted standard
samples and ~7 mm for a pancreas tissue sample. We employed the LDIDDMS
imaging for single cell analysis and observed a significant heterogeneity
in cellular apoptosis of HEK cells. LDIDD-MS also enables real-time measurement/
imaging of exocytosed biomolecules in live cells. Exocytosis of
neuropeptides and enzymes in PC12 upon biochemical or biophysical stimulation
has been acquired and we believe that this will make it possible for use
to obtain spatiotemporally resolved maps of neurosecretions at single-cell
resolution.