TY - JOUR
T1 - A Perspective on Unintentional Fragments and Their Impact on the Dark Metabolome, Untargeted Profiling, Molecular Networking, Public Data, and Repository Scale Analysis
AU - El Abiead, Yasin
AU - Mohanty, Ipsita
AU - Xing, Shipei
AU - Rutz, Adriano
AU - Charron-Lamoureux, Vincent
AU - Damiani, Tito
AU - Lu, Wenyun
AU - Patti, Gary J.
AU - Zamboni, Nicola
AU - Yanes, Oscar
AU - Dorrestein, Pieter C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society
PY - 2025/12/22
Y1 - 2025/12/22
N2 - In/postsource fragments (ISFs) arise during electrospray ionization or ion transfer in mass spectrometry when molecular bonds break, generating ions that can complicate data interpretation. Although ISFs have been recognized for decades, their contribution to untargeted metabolomics─particularly in the context of the so-called “dark matter” (unannotated MS or MS/MS spectra) and the “dark metabolome” (unannotated molecules)─remains unsettled. This ongoing debate reflects a central tension: while some caution against overinterpreting unidentified signals lacking biological evidence, others argue that dismissing them too quickly risks overlooking genuine molecular discoveries. These discussions also raise a deeper question: what exactly should be considered part of the metabolome? As metabolomics advances toward large-scale data mining and high-throughput computational analysis, resolving these conceptual and methodological ambiguities has become essential. In this perspective, we propose a refined definition of the “dark metabolome” and present a systematic overview of ISFs and related ion forms, including adducts and multimers. We examine their impact on metabolite annotation, experimental design, statistical analysis, computational workflows, and repository-scale data mining. Finally, we provide practical recommendations─including a set of dos and do nots for researchers and reviewers─and discuss the broader implications of ISFs for how the field explores unknown molecular space. By embracing a more nuanced understanding of ISFs, metabolomics can achieve greater rigor, reduce misinterpretation, and unlock new opportunities for discovery.
AB - In/postsource fragments (ISFs) arise during electrospray ionization or ion transfer in mass spectrometry when molecular bonds break, generating ions that can complicate data interpretation. Although ISFs have been recognized for decades, their contribution to untargeted metabolomics─particularly in the context of the so-called “dark matter” (unannotated MS or MS/MS spectra) and the “dark metabolome” (unannotated molecules)─remains unsettled. This ongoing debate reflects a central tension: while some caution against overinterpreting unidentified signals lacking biological evidence, others argue that dismissing them too quickly risks overlooking genuine molecular discoveries. These discussions also raise a deeper question: what exactly should be considered part of the metabolome? As metabolomics advances toward large-scale data mining and high-throughput computational analysis, resolving these conceptual and methodological ambiguities has become essential. In this perspective, we propose a refined definition of the “dark metabolome” and present a systematic overview of ISFs and related ion forms, including adducts and multimers. We examine their impact on metabolite annotation, experimental design, statistical analysis, computational workflows, and repository-scale data mining. Finally, we provide practical recommendations─including a set of dos and do nots for researchers and reviewers─and discuss the broader implications of ISFs for how the field explores unknown molecular space. By embracing a more nuanced understanding of ISFs, metabolomics can achieve greater rigor, reduce misinterpretation, and unlock new opportunities for discovery.
KW - analytical artifact
KW - dark metabolome
KW - electrospray ionization
KW - in-source fragmentation
KW - mass spectrometry
KW - metabolomics
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105025351117
U2 - 10.1021/jacsau.5c01063
DO - 10.1021/jacsau.5c01063
M3 - Review article
C2 - 41450660
AN - SCOPUS:105025351117
SN - 2691-3704
VL - 5
SP - 5828
EP - 5850
JO - JACS Au
JF - JACS Au
IS - 12
ER -