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Data analysis of GC-MS and LC-MS in Environmental Science

Miao Yu

2023-02-05

Qualitative and quantitative analysis of contaminants are the core of the Environmental Science. GC/LC-MS might be one of the most popular instruments for such analytical methods. Previous works such as xcms were developed for GC-MS data. However, such packages have limited functions for environmental analysis. In this package. I added functions for various GC/LC-MS data analysis purposes used in environmental analysis. Such feature could not only reveal certain problems, but also help the user find out the unknown patterns in the dataset of GC/LC-MS.

Data analysis for single sample

Data structure of GC/LC-MS full scan mode

GC/LC is used for separation and MS is used for detection in a GC/LC-MS system. The collected data are intensities of certain mass at different retention time. When we perform analysis on certain column in full scan mode, the counts of different mass were collected in each scan. The dwell time for each scan might only last for 500ms or less. Then the next scan begins with a different retention time. Here we could use a matrix to stand for those data. Each column stands for each mass and row stands for the retention time of that scan. Such matrix could be treated as time series data. In this package, we treat such data as matrix type.

For high-resolution MS, building such matrix is tricky. We might need to bin the RAW data to make alignment for different scans into a matrix. Such works could be done by xcms.

Data structure of GC-MS SIM mode

When you perform a selected ions monitor(SIM) mode analysis, only few mass data were collected and each mass would have counts and retention time as a time series data. In this package, we treat such data as data.frame type.

Data input

You could use getmd to import the mass spectrum data as supported by xcms and get the profile of GC-MS data matrix. mzstep is the bin step for mass:

data <- enviGCMS:::getmd('data/data1.CDF', mzstep = 0.1)

You could also subset the data by the mass(m/z 100-1000) or retention time range(40-100s) in getmd function:

data <- enviGCMS:::getmd(data,mzrange=c(100,1000),rtrange=c(40,100))

You could also combined the mass full-scan data with the same range of retention time by cbmd:

data <- cbmd(data1,data2,data3)

Visualization of mass spectrum data

You could plot the Total Ion Chromatogram(TIC) for certain RT and mass range.

plottic(data,rt=c(3.1,25),ms=c(100,1000))

You could also plot the mass spectrum for certain RT range. You could use the returned MSP files for NIST search:

plotrtms(data,rt=c(3.1,25),ms=c(100,1000))

The Extracted Ion Chromatogram(EIC) is also support by enviGCMS and the returned data could be analyzed for molecular isotopes:

plotmsrt(data,ms=500,rt=c(3.1,25))

You could use plotms or plotmz to show the heatmap or scatter plot for LC/GC-MS data, which is very useful for exploratory data analysis.

plotms(data)
plotmz(data)

You could change the retention time into the temperature if it is a constant speed of temperature rising process. But you need show the temperature range.

plott(data,temp = c(100,320))

Data analysis for influence from GC-MS

enviGCMS supplied many functions for decreasing the noise during the analysis process. findline could be used for find line of the boundary regression model for noise. comparems could be used to make a point-to-point data subtraction of two full-scan mass spectrum data. plotgroup could be used convert the data matrix into a 0-1 heatmap according to threshold. plotsub could be used to show the self background subtraction of full-scan data. plotsms shows the RSD of the intensity of full scan data. plothist could be used to find the data distribution of the histogram of the intensities of full scan data.

Data analysis for molecular isotope ratio

Some functions could be used to calculate the molecular isotope ratio. EIC data could be import into GetIntergration and return the information of found peaks. Getisotoplogues could be used to calculate the molecular isotope ratio of certain molecular. Some shortcut function such as batch and qbatch could be used to calculate molecular isotope ratio for multiple and single molecular in EIC data.

Quantitative analysis for short-chain chlorinated paraffins(SCCPs)

enviGCMS supply function to perform Quantitative analysis for short-chain chlorinated paraffins(SCCPs) with Q-tof data. Use getsccp to make Quantitative analysis for SCCPs.

If you want a graphical user interface for SCCPs analysis, a shiny application is developed in this package. You could use runsccp() to power on the application in a browser.

Data analysis for multiple samples

In environmental non-target analysis, when multiple samples are collected, problem will raise from the heterogeneity among samples. For example, retention time would shift due to the column. In those cases, xcms package could be used to get a peaks list across samples within certain retention time and m/z. enviGCMS package has some wrapped function to get the peaks list. Besides, some specific functions such as group comparison, batch correction and visualization are also included.

Wrap function for xcms package

Data imputation and filtering

Visualization of peaks list data

Summary

In general, enviGCMS could be used to explore single data or peaks list from GC/LC-MS and extract certain patterns in the data with various purposes.

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.