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ABSTRACT
Single-cell proteomics (SCP) has emerged as a powerful approach for understanding cellular heterogeneity and biological processes at unprecedented resolution. However, the extremely limited protein content of individual cells (femtogram to picogram levels) pushes current mass spectrometry instrumentation to its sensitivity limits, creating a critical analytical bottleneck. While selected reaction monitoring (SRM) using triple quadrupole (QqQ) instruments offers advantages in sensitivity and reproducibility for targeted proteomics quantification, SRM still struggles with sensitivity for quantification of moderate- or low-abundance proteins from single-cell sample amounts. Here, we report the development and systematic evaluation of a dual ion funnel interface designed to address the sensitivity limitation by significantly enhancing ion transmission efficiency in commercial QqQ mass spectrometers. The dual ion funnel interface, composed of a curved S-funnel followed by a conventional ion funnel, improves ion transmission efficiency while reducing chemical noise through selective ion focusing. The performance of the dual ion funnel interface was systematically compared to standard interface on a TSQ Vantage platform across samples with different levels of complexity. The dual funnel interface demonstrated to provide up to 25-fold improvement in sensitivity across a wide range of protein concentrations in different biological matrices (low complex mouse macrophage and high complex human cells). Critically, enhanced sensitivity was accompanied by increased analytical reproducibility with lower coefficient of variations. Most importantly, the dual funnel interface enabled reliable quantification of low-abundance proteins that were barely detectable or not detected by the standard interface, extending analysis to single-cell equivalent amounts while maintaining excellent reproducibility. These results demonstrate that the dual funnel interface addresses the critical bottleneck in quantitative targeted proteomics, providing a technological foundation for ultrasensitive targeted SCP that requires both high sensitivity and robust quantitative performance.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
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