Targeted mass spectrometry
Targeted mass spectrometry is a mass spectrometry technique that uses multiple stages of tandem mass spectrometry for ions of specific mass, at specific time. The values of the m/z and time are defined in an inclusion list which is derived from a previous analysis.
Applications
Targeted analysis allows the thorough analysis of all ions, at all abundance range above the noise level, at any time window in the experiment. In contrast, non-targeted analysis would, typically, only allow detection of the most abundant 50-100 ions over the entire experiment time. Such limitation of non-targeted analysis makes it less suitable for analyzing highly complex, highly dynamic sample such as human blood serum.However, the methods of utilizing targeted mass spectrometry are still at a primitive stage, in the sense that the inclusion list used in the targeted analysis is typically manually typed-in by scientists. In addition to that, only one inclusion list is allowed for the entire experiment. Such manual process is both labor-intensive and error-prone. This is largely due to the lack of software to control the mass spectrometer.