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Fields & Applications Mass Spectrometry, Technology, Metabolomics & Lipidomics

The Super-Resolution Revolution

I grew up wanting to be a surgeon, a laudable ambition with one fatal flaw – I am extremely squeamish. Luckily, I loved physics just as much as biology. Completing my PhD here at the UK’s National Physical Laboratory (NPL) taught me just how important measurement science is – and sparked my fascination with mass spectrometry imaging (MSI). Over the next 20 years, I developed a world class capability in secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). Most of our work was in devices, organic semiconductors, and advanced manufacturing, but I could see huge potential for these techniques in biology.

Five years ago, I established the National Centre of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry Imaging (NiCE-MSI), with the goal of bringing physical metrology to the life sciences. Now, a large amount of my research is with the pharma industry, trying to better understand how drugs interact with cells, and so reduce drug attrition. The Centre started with just five people, and it’s now grown to one of the biggest MSI centers worldwide, with 22 staff and 20 PhD students.

In vino veritas

These days, my ultimate research goal is to achieve “super-resolution metabolic imaging”. Super-resolution microscopy has been absolutely transformational for the life sciences; it lets us peer into the machinery of life – the proteins that make up our cells. With MSI, I believe we can do the same with metabolites and drugs.

It’s a big challenge. Unlike microscopy, MSI is typically label-free – labels can interfere with drug dynamics, and would be impossible for metabolites, which are constantly changing. There are other problems, too; SIMS allows us to focus down into the super-resolution space (under 250 nm). However, the mass spectra we get are of poor quality, so we cannot always identify the molecules accurately.

One evening in May, 2011 I was enjoying a glass of Pinot Noir, while preparing a presentation for a forthcoming conference. My presentation discussed why the spectra we get from SIMS are so complex and hard to interpret. Largely, it’s because the MS instruments we use prioritize speed over accuracy. Speed is crucial to cover the millions of pixels needed for 3D imaging, but to do any serious work in life sciences, we need accuracy too. Unfortunately, the constraints of physics mean that it’s not possible to combine speed and accuracy into a single analysis – all MS is a compromise. To illustrate my point, I plotted a graph with speed on one axis, and accuracy on the other. I placed different mass spectrometer designs on this chart, from the super-fast time of flight (TOF) analyzers often used in SIMS, to the much slower but more accurate Fourier-transform mass spectrometers, such as the Orbitrap. As I looked at my chart, I had an idea – why not combine two mass spectrometers, one from each end of the spectrum, and so get the best qualities of both?

At NPL, we take a lot of time and trouble to understand the measurement principles we’re working with; it allows us to see the big picture and spot gaps – and opportunities. It was clear to me that a hybrid instrument was the only way to get the qualities we needed, so that’s what we set out to create. The result was OrbiSIMS, which combines TOF and Orbitrap mass spectrometers.

Orbitrap is well known in the life sciences for its high mass accuracy and mass resolving power, allowing us to find the smallest saplings within a forest of peaks. However, it is too slow for the 3D imaging we want to do; TOF-MS provides the speed. The combination of the two confers some important advantages, some of which only became apparent during development. It’s a little like a hybrid car – the fusion of a petrol engine and electric power gives a combination of qualities that would otherwise be unachievable, like rapid acceleration and fuel efficiency.

Better together

For readers who are not familiar with SIMS, it involves scanning a focused ion beam over the surface to be analyzed. Each time it hits a pixel on the surface it causes “sputtering”, liberating molecules from the top surface of the material – in a cell, the outer cell membrane. The molecules enter the TOF mass spectrometer, giving us a mass spectrum for that one pixel. We repeat the process until we have generated a 2D image. We can then pull up the image for any of the mass peaks in the mass spectrum – for example, we might want to look at a particular lipid, drug molecule or metabolite. To generate a 3D image, we use another ion beam to carefully remove a thin layer of the surface, like a microtome slice. In a normal SIMS instrument, the material removed is discarded, but in OrbiSIMS it is analyzed by the Orbitrap, increasing our sensitivity and specificity. We then repeat the whole process for the newly revealed surface, before removing another layer.

Josephine Bunch with the Orbitrap and MALDI ion source.

3D OrbiSIMS.

To put it another way – imagine you are digging in your garden. You take a digital photo of the plot you are about to dig, then get your spade and dig out a layer of soil, before taking another picture. If you keep taking photos as each layer is dug out, you eventually build up a basic 3D image of the plot. That’s SIMS. With OrbiSIMS, we not only take photos of the layers of soil as they are revealed (using TOF), but also analyze the soil that is removed (using Orbitrap technology).

To make the instrument, we brought together two of the leading mass spectrometry companies – Orbitrap-maker Thermo Fisher Scientific and imaging TOF-SIMS specialists IONTOF. GlaxoSmithKline is an essential partner in the project – helping to ensure a successful outcome that will have impact in the pharmaceutical industry to reduce drug attrition and improve our understanding of drug up-take at a single-cell level.

3D OrbiSIMS.

People were very excited when they saw what was possible with OrbiSIMS.
Sharing OrbiSIMS

The first results were presented in a plenary talk at the SIMS XX conference, Seattle, USA in September 2015. People were very excited when they saw what was possible with OrbiSIMS, and we are now working with a number of groups who plan to install an OrbiSIMS in their own labs. 

We have taken a great deal of care to make the workflow as simple as possible for people with a biology or life sciences background. Alexander Makarov made a huge contribution to the life sciences when he invented the Orbitrap, and it has become a de facto standard for proteomics and metabolomics studies. People are very comfortable with the technology and its capabilities, so the skills are already there to move into imaging with OrbiSIMS. If you can use an Orbitrap, you are halfway to being able to operate OrbiSIMS. To learn the imaging side of things takes longer, but people with some research experience can usually get up and running fairly quickly. 

Another nice feature of this instrument is what we call “cryo-SIMS”. If we want to examine cells down to the organelle scale, we need to be able to preserve the ultrastructure of the cells. Researchers in transmission and scanning electron microscopy have done so much beautiful work on preparing samples for a vacuum-based instrument – we have copied their achievements with pride. Our instrument is compatible with Leica sample preparation systems, so anyone with previous experience of TEM and SEM can easily prepare samples 

New insight

We took delivery of the first OrbiSIMS in November 2016. It has already started to give us some unique insights, and we have many more projects planned. The applications for OrbiSIMS are many and varied, but a big focus for us is the development of new drugs. There are three key questions we must answer about any potential drug:

  1. Does the drug reach its target? 
  2. Does it bind with the target? 
  3. Does it have a pharmacological effect?

Our work with the pharmaceutical industry is all about providing answers that help unsuitable candidate drugs “fail fast” – before the company spends US$1.8 billion bringing it to a medicine. Imaging studies can shed light on fundamental biological processes, and reveal how and why a candidate might fail. For example, we published a paper recently showing the first direct evidence of drug-induced phospholipidosis (excess accumulation of phospholipids in tissues). It is a known side effect of a number of drugs, but the mechanisms (and clinical significance) are not well understood. The drug we studied, amiodarone, was already known to accumulate in the lysosomes, but we were the first to image the subsequent upregulation of lipids to form excess multi-layer lamellas – the clinical sign of phospholipidosis.

Another good example is tracking drug distribution within individual cells. OrbiSIMS can provide not only high-resolution images showing where the drug is, but also data that confirm the identity of the drug and show upregulation of metabolites. With this level of detail at an individual cell level, you can see variation within cell populations. Why do some cells take on more drug than others? Do they all have the same metabolic mechanisms? How do the cells communicate? OrbiSIMS can help us get the answers to these and many more questions. It’s great to feel that we have introduced a new capability to life sciences.

Room at the bottom

We’re very excited to be part of the Cancer Research UK Grand Challenge project headed by Josephine Bunch – read more in “Cartographers of Cancer”. Most of the Grand Challenge partners focus on the multicellular or tissue scale, so we have an opportunity to add something unique by using 2D and 3D SIMS and OrbiSIMS for metabolic imaging at the single cell, cell-cell interaction and subcellular levels. In the words of physicist Richard Feynman, “There is plenty of room at the bottom.”

Preserving the structure of cells, and their constantly changing metabolites, is a big challenge, which is why cryo-SIMS is so important. We must instantly freeze cells and keep them at -80 °C until we can analyze them, otherwise metabolites will change. Our Grand Challenge project colleague at Cambridge University, Kevin Brindle, will use liquid nitrogen cooling to freeze biopsy samples immediately and ship them to us, so we can take a snapshot of the metabolites in time. Connecting the in vivo measurements Kevin makes using hyperpolarized MRI with our subcellular analyses will give us a cryogenic snapshot of tumor metabolism.

High-resolution imaging takes time – even with OrbiSIMS. We can’t analyze whole tumors or organs in the timeframe available, so we will be guided by what Josephine and others find in their wider-resolution imaging.

It’s a very exciting project and the whole team are hugely enthusiastic. For me, it comes back to my childhood desire to become a clinician; it’s great to have come full circle and be doing something that could ultimately improve or extend people’s lives.

What’s next?

We’re now in the second phase of the OrbiSIMS project; the instrument is already proving its value, but to achieve super-resolution metabolic imaging we need to significantly increase sensitivity. At the moment, the vast majority of molecules released by sputtering from an ion beam are neutral, so we don’t see them in the mass spectra. At the moment only around 1 in 105 molecules are ionized, which limits sensitivity. If we could go up to 1 in 103, we could increase spatial resolution by a factor of 10 – jumping from 1 µm to 100 nm resolution and putting us well within the super-resolution bracket (under 250 nm).

We are attempting to reach that goal in two ways. First, we recently filed a patent for a novel in situ deposition matrix. In MALDI, a matrix is used to enhance the ion yield, but the matrix contains a solvent that de-localizes the molecules. That’s not such a big issue in MALDI since resolution is typically no better than 10 µm, but it’s no good for subcellular imaging. So we invented a method that allows us to deposit matrix molecules onto the surface (in situ, while taking our 3D image). It gives us up to a tenfold increase in signal, and could get us to about 300 nm resolution with suitable ion beams.

Second, we will be developing post-ionization methods to give us that final boost in resolution. We already have a portable TOF-MS (Kore Technology, UK) that we call the “baby OrbiSIMS,”  which will be traveling around a number of different laser facilities, so we can quantitatively measure the fundamental processes of laser post-ionization, and decide which laser system to integrate into the instrument.

While generating all this amazing data, we must make sure we have the tools to manage it. One of my colleagues is developing machine-learning methods, combined with standard informatics tools, to help us identify more of the peaks in our spectra. In the past, we have often had to guess the identity of peaks from SIMS, but with the additional data coming from the Orbitrap, we can use the wonderful techniques developed by the informatics community to give us a definite ID.

What we can do with OrbiSIMS already is amazing and we’re going to keep pushing to break through the 250 nm barrier. It’s a 10-year goal but if we can achieve that, I think we will be able to bring those same levels of transformation that we saw with the advent of super resolution microscopy.

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About the Author
Ian Gilmore

Ian Gilmore is a Senior NPL Fellow and Head of Science at NPL. He is the founder of the National Centre of Excellence in Mass Spectrometry Imaging (NiCE-MSI) at NPL, where he conceived of the 3D OrbiSIMS instrument and led the project to build it. The Gilmore group will lead the high-resolution 2D and 3D SIMS imaging for the Grand Challenge.

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