A Machine Learning-Driven Comparison of Ion Images Obtained by MALDI and MALDI-2 Mass Spectrometry Imaging

Publication Name

Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry

Abstract

Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) enables label-free imaging of biomolecules in biological tissues. However, many species remain undetected due to their poor ionization efficiencies. MALDI-2 (laser-induced post-ionization) is the most widely used post-ionization method for improving analyte ionization efficiencies. Mass spectra acquired using MALDI-2 constitute a combination of ions generated by both MALDI and MALDI-2 processes. Until now, no studies have focused on a detailed comparison between the ion images (as opposed to the generated m/z values) produced by MALDI and MALDI-2 for mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) experiments. Herein, we investigated the ion images produced by both MALDI and MALDI-2 on the same tissue section using correlation analysis (to explore similarities in ion images for ions common to both MALDI and MALDI-2) and a deep learning approach. For the latter, we used an analytical workflow based on the Xception convolutional neural network, which was originally trained for human-like natural image classification but which we adapted to elucidate similarities and differences in ion images obtained using the two MSI techniques. Correlation analysis demonstrated that common ions yielded similar spatial distributions with low-correlation species explained by either poor signal intensity in MALDI or the generation of additional unresolved signals using MALDI-2. Using the Xception-based method, we identified many regions in the t-SNE space of spatially similar ion images containing MALDI and MALDI-2-related signals. More notably, the method revealed distinct regions containing only MALDI-2 ion images with unique spatial distributions that were not observed using MALDI. These data explicitly demonstrate the ability of MALDI-2 to reveal molecular features and patterns as well as histological regions of interest that are not visible when using conventional MALDI.

Open Access Status

This publication is not available as open access

Volume

35

Issue

3

First Page

466

Last Page

475

Funding Number

NI210100127

Funding Sponsor

Australian Government

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Link to publisher version (DOI)

http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jasms.3c00357