Name:
Adduct:
Polarity:
Z:
m/z:
±:
CCS: Å2
±: %
SMI:
Type:

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1
May, J. C. et al. Conformational Ordering of Biomolecules in the Gas Phase: Nitrogen Collision Cross Sections Measured on a Prototype High Resolution Drift Tube Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometer. Anal. Chem. 86, 2107–2116 (2014).


2
Paglia, G. et al. Ion Mobility Derived Collision Cross Sections to Support Metabolomics Applications. Anal. Chem. 86, 3985–3993 (2014).


3
Groessl, M., Graf, S. & Knochenmuss, R. High resolution ion mobility-mass spectrometry for separation and identification of isomeric lipids. Analyst 140, 6904–6911 (2015).


4
Zhou, Z., Shen, X., Tu, J. & Zhu, Z.-J. Large-Scale Prediction of Collision Cross-Section Values for Metabolites in Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 88, 11084–11091 (2016).


5
Hines, K. M., Herron, J. & Xu, L. Assessment of altered lipid homeostasis by HILIC-ion mobility-mass spectrometry-based lipidomics. The Journal of Lipid Research 58, 809–819 (2017).


6
Bijlsma, L. et al. Prediction of Collision Cross-Section Values for Small Molecules: Application to Pesticide Residue Analysis. Anal. Chem. 89, 6583–6589 (2017).


7
Hines, K. M., Ross, D. H., Davidson, K. L., Bush, M. F. & Xu, L. Large-Scale Structural Characterization of Drug and Drug-Like Compounds by High-Throughput Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 89, 9023–9030 (2017).


8
Stow, S. M. et al. An Interlaboratory Evaluation of Drift Tube Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry Collision Cross Section Measurements. Anal. Chem. 89, 9048–9055 (2017).


9
Zhou, Z., Tu, J., Xiong, X., Shen, X. & Zhu, Z.-J. LipidCCS: Prediction of Collision Cross-Section Values for Lipids with High Precision To Support Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry-Based Lipidomics. Anal. Chem. 89, 9559–9566 (2017).


10
Zheng, X. et al. A structural examination and collision cross section database for over 500 metabolites and xenobiotics using drift tube ion mobility spectrometry. Chem. Sci. 8, 7724–7736 (2017).


11
Hines, K. M. et al. Characterization of the Mechanisms of Daptomycin Resistance among Gram-Positive Bacterial Pathogens by Multidimensional Lipidomics. mSphere 2, 99–16 (2017).


12
Lian, R. et al. Ion mobility derived collision cross section as an additional measure to support the rapid analysis of abused drugs and toxic compounds using electrospray ion mobility time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Anal. Methods 10, 749–756 (2018).


13
Mollerup, C. B., Mardal, M., Dalsgaard, P. W., Linnet, K. & Barron, L. P. Prediction of collision cross section and retention time for broad scope screening in gradient reversed-phase liquid chromatography-ion mobility-high resolution accurate mass spectrometry. Journal of Chromatography A 1542, 82–88 (2018).


14
Righetti, L. et al. Ion mobility-derived collision cross section database: Application to mycotoxin analysis. Analytica Chimica Acta 1014, 50–57 (2018).


15
Tejada-Casado, C. et al. Collision cross section (CCS) as a complementary parameter to characterize human and veterinary drugs. Analytica Chimica Acta 1043, 52–63 (2018).


16
Nichols, C. M. et al. Untargeted Molecular Discovery in Primary Metabolism: Collision Cross Section as a Molecular Descriptor in Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 90, 14484–14492 (2018).


17
Hines, K. M. & Xu, L. Lipidomic consequences of phospholipid synthesis defects in Escherichia coli revealed by HILIC-ion mobility-mass spectrometry. Chemistry and Physics of Lipids 219, 15–22 (2019).


18
Leaptrot, K. L., May, J. C., Dodds, J. N. & McLean, J. A. Ion mobility conformational lipid atlas for high confidence lipidomics. Nature Communications 1–9 (2019).


19
Blaženović, I. et al. Increasing Compound Identification Rates in Untargeted Lipidomics Research with Liquid Chromatography Drift Time–Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry. Anal. Chem. 90, 10758–10764 (2018).


20
Vasilopoulou, C. G. et al. Trapped ion mobility spectrometry and PASEF enable in-depth lipidomics from minimal sample amounts. Nature Communications 1–11 (2020).


21
Tsugawa, H. et al. MS-DIAL 4: accelerating lipidomics using an MS/MS, CCS, and retention time atlas. bioRxiv 37, 513 (2020).


22
Poland, J. C. et al. Collision Cross Section Conformational Analyses of Bile Acids via Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry. Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 31, 1625–1631 (2020).


23
Dodds, J. et al. Rapid Characterization of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) by Ion Mobility Spectrometry−Mass Spectrometry (IMS-MS). Anal. Chem. 92, 4427-4435 (2020).


24
Celma, A. et al. Improving Target and Suspect Screening High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry Workflows in Environmental Analysis by Ion Mobility Separation. Environ. Sci. Technol. 54, 15120-15131 (2020)


25
Belova, L. et al. Ion Mobility-High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry (IM-HRMS) for the Analysis of Contaminants of Emerging Concern (CECs): Database Compilation and Application to Urine Samples. Anal. Chem. XXX, XXXX-XXXX (2021)


26
Ross, D. H., et al. High-Throughput Measurement and Machine Learning-Based Prediction of Collision Cross Sections for Drugs and Drug Metabolites. J Am Soc Mass Spectr 33, 1061–1072 (2022).


ID Name Adduct Structure m/z CCS SMI Type Z Ref CCS Type CCS method
CCSBASE_F91C377DE8 Primuletin_met007 [M+Na]+ 437.0849 196.7 O=C(O)C1OC(Oc2cccc3oc(-c4ccccc4)cc(=O)c23)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_48E859EE92 Primuletin_met007 [M+K]+ 453.0588 200.6 O=C(O)C1OC(Oc2cccc3oc(-c4ccccc4)cc(=O)c23)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_59501F96FC Plumbagin_met001 [M+K]+ 231.0423 142.6 CC1CC(O)c2c(O)cccc2C1=O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_8C5F5BC617 Plumbagin_met003 [M+Na]+ 217.0325 139.0 O=C(O)C1OC(O)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_70754FE2A7 Plumbagin_met006 [M+K]+ 405.0588 174.0 CC1CC(=O)c2c(OC3OC(C(=O)O)C(O)C(O)C3O)cccc2C1=O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_EAECEDD778 Plumbagin_met008 [M+H]+ 369.1185 159.8 CC1CC(=O)c2c(OC3OC(C(=O)O)C(O)C(O)C3O)cccc2C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_BB1C60B49E Karanjin_met005 [M+H]+ 455.0978 196.3 O=C(O)C1OC(Oc2c(-c3ccccc3)oc3c(ccc4occc43)c2=O)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_03C5A75143 Karanjin_met005 [M+Na]+ 477.0798 203.3 O=C(O)C1OC(Oc2c(-c3ccccc3)oc3c(ccc4occc43)c2=O)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_AA4E314A13 Karanjin_met005 [M+K]+ 493.0537 205.9 O=C(O)C1OC(Oc2c(-c3ccccc3)oc3c(ccc4occc43)c2=O)C(O)C(O)C1O small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
CCSBASE_394D3F30CD Karanjin_met008 [M+H]+ 279.0657 155.7 O=c1c(O)c(-c2ccccc2)oc2c1ccc1occc12 small molecule 1 26 DT single field, calibrated
1 2 ... 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 ... 1698 1699