The invention relates to mass spectrometry, and more particularly to methods and apparatus for creating a region for ion-ion reactions within a mass spectrometer.
Mass spectrometry (MS) is an analytical technique for determining the elemental composition of test substances that has both quantitative and qualitative applications. For example, MS can be useful for identifying unknown compounds, determining the isotopic composition of elements in a molecule, and determining the structure of a particular compound by observing its fragmentation, as well as for quantifying the amount of a particular compound in the sample.
With specific regard to mass spectrometric analysis of proteins and peptides, various dissociation techniques such as collision induced dissociation (CID), electron capture dissociation (ECD), and electron transfer dissociation (ETD) have been examined. Whereas CID typically involves energetic collisions between the precursor ion of interest (e.g., an ionized peptide) and inert neutral gas atoms and molecules to generate product b- and y-type ions resulting from amide cleavages of the precursor ion, ECD and ETD can generate product ions through ionic interactions with oppositely reagent ions within the mass spectrometer. In ECD, for example, low-energy electrons are captured by multiply charged positive precursor ions, which may then undergo fragmentation due to the electron capture. In ETD, the electron is typically donated or lost through an ion/ion reaction of the precursor ion with a reagent ion of the opposite charge. Whereas cleavage resulting from CID can provide amino acid sequence information for peptide and protein ions, labile post-translational modifications are often lost; for both ECD and ETD, peptide and protein ion dissociation can give rise to product c- and z-type ions and preservation of post-translational modifications of the precursor peptides through extensive cleavage of the peptide backbone.
Previous attempts to promote ion-ion reactions have generally focused on upstream regions of quadrupole-based mass spectrometers due to the increased pressures in these regions, which promote collisional cooling of the ions and thus, increased interaction time between precursor and reagent ions. Previous methods are also limited by the need to generate a devoted, static region in which both positive and negative ions can interact and/or be confined to allow for the ETD reactions to result.
Accordingly, there remains a need for improved methods and systems for creating an ion-ion reaction region within a linear ion trap.
In accordance with one aspect, certain embodiments of the applicants' teachings relate to a method for performing ion-ion reactions in a mass spectrometer system. According to the method, a first group of ions can be confined in a sub-volume of a multipole ion trap. The method also comprises introducing a second group of ions into the multipole ion trap, the first and second groups of ions being of opposite polarity. While maintaining the first group of ions within said sub-volume, an exit barrier is generated at an exit end of the multipole ion trap to reflect at least a portion of the second group of ions through said sub-volume at least two times.
In accordance with one aspect, certain embodiments of the applicants' teachings relate to a method for performing ion-ion reactions in a mass spectrometer system. According to the method, a first group of ions can be introduced into a multipole ion trap comprising a quadrupole rod set extending from a first end to a second end, the quadrupole rod set having an end electrode located at each end thereof. The method also comprises applying a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode disposed between the first and second ends of the quadrupole rod set and an RF voltage to one of said end electrodes to confine the first group of ions axially within a sub-volume of the multipole ion trap between at least one auxiliary electrode and one of the end electrodes. A second group of ions is introduced into the multipole ion trap, the second group of ions being of opposite polarity to the first group of ions. The first group of ions is allowed to undergo ion-ion reactions with the second group of ions to produce product ions while maintaining the first group of ions within said sub-volume. The method can further comprise applying an RF voltage to the quadrupole rod set to confine the first and second groups of ions radially within the multipole ion trap.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the first group of ions comprises reagent anions and the second group of ions comprises precursor cations. In various embodiments, applying a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode comprises applying a negative DC voltage thereto.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the first group of ions comprises precursor cations and the second group of ions comprises reagent anions. In various embodiments, applying a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode comprises applying a positive DC voltage thereto.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the first group of ions comprises reagent cations and the second group of ions comprises precursor anions. In various embodiments, applying a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode comprises applying a negative DC voltage thereto.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the first group of ions comprises precursor anions and the second group of ions comprises reagent cations. In various embodiments, applying a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode comprises applying a negative DC voltage thereto.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, allowing the first group of ions to interact with the second group of ions to produce product ions while maintaining the first group of ions within said sub-volume comprises maintaining the DC voltage on at least one auxiliary electrode disposed between the first and second ends of the quadrupole rod set and an RF voltage on one of said end electrodes. In various embodiments, the method further comprises, while maintaining the first group of ions within said sub-volume, applying a barrier voltage to the other of said end electrodes to trap the second group of ions within the multipole ion trap. In various embodiments, the barrier voltage comprises an RF voltage. In various embodiments, the barrier voltage comprises a DC voltage having the same polarity as the second group of ions. In various embodiments, the barrier voltage causes said second group of ions to make multiple passes through said sub-volume.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the end electrodes comprise a first end electrode located adjacent to the first end of the quadrupole rod set and a second end electrode located adjacent to the second end of the quadrupole rod set. Further, at least one auxiliary electrode comprises a plurality of auxiliary electrodes interposed between the quadrupole rods and extending from a first end to a second end along a length of the quadrupole rod set, the first end of the auxiliary electrodes being located between the first end of the quadrupole rod set and the second end of the auxiliary electrodes. The second end of the auxiliary electrodes is located between the first end of the auxiliary electrodes and the second end of the quadrupole rod set. In various embodiments, applying a DC voltage to the auxiliary electrodes comprises applying a negative DC voltage such that the first group of ions are axially confined between the second end of the auxiliary electrodes and the second end electrode, the first group of ions having a negative polarity.
In various embodiments, the ion-ion reaction comprises an electron transfer dissociation reaction. In various embodiments, the ion-ion reaction comprises a proton-transfer reaction. In various embodiments, the quadrupole rod set comprises Q3 in a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the auxiliary electrodes comprise T-electrodes. In various embodiments, the T-electrodes have an increasing depth of radial penetration along a length of the quadrupole rod set.
In some aspects, the quadrupole rod set can be contained within a vacuum chamber such that a base operating pressure is less than about 1×10−4 Torr. In various aspects of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the method further comprises introducing one or more pulses of a gas into said sub-volume. In some aspects, pulses of gas are configured to increase the pressure in said sub-volume in a range of about 6×10−5 Torr to about 5×10−4 Torr.
In some aspects, the second group of ions are introduced into the multipole ion trap with a kinetic energy less than about 10 eV.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, there is provided a mass spectrometer system comprising one or more ion sources configured to generate a first group of ions and a second group of ions, wherein the first and second groups of ions have opposite polarities. The system can also comprise a multipole ion trap comprising (i) a quadrupole rod set extending from a first end to a second end, (ii) at least one auxiliary electrode disposed between the first and second ends of the quadrupole rod set, and (iii) end electrodes located at both ends of the quadrupole rod set. A controller, operatively coupled to the multipole ion trap, is configured to i) apply a DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode and an RF voltage to one of said end electrodes to confine the first group of ions axially within a sub-volume of the multipole ion trap between at least one auxiliary electrode and said one of said end electrodes, and ii) apply a barrier voltage to the other of said end electrodes while maintaining the first group of ions within said sub-volume such that the first and second group of ions are trapped within the multipole ion trap and can interact to produce product ions.
In various embodiments, the barrier voltage comprises an RF voltage. In various embodiments, the barrier voltage comprises a DC voltage having the same polarity as the second group of ions.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the controller is configured to apply or adjust voltages to any of the quadrupole rod sets, auxiliary electrodes, or end electrodes so as to cause said second group of ions to make multiple passes through said sub-volume.
In various embodiments, the first group of ions comprises reagent anions and the second group of ions comprises precursor cations. In one aspect, the controller is configured to apply a negative DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode to confine the reagent anions axially within the sub-volume of the multipole ion trap between at least one auxiliary electrode and one of the end electrodes.
In various embodiments, the first group of ions comprises precursor cations and the second group of ions comprises reagent anions. The controller is configured to apply a positive DC voltage to at least one auxiliary electrode to confine the precursor cations axially within the sub-volume of the multipole ion trap between at least one auxiliary electrode and one of the end electrodes.
In accordance with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the controller is further configured to apply an RF voltage to the quadrupole rod set to confine the first and second groups of ions radially within the multipole ion trap.
In one aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the end electrodes comprise a first end electrode located adjacent to the first end of the quadrupole rod set and a second end electrode located adjacent to the second end of the quadrupole rod set. At least one auxiliary electrode comprises a plurality of auxiliary electrodes interposed between the quadrupole rods and extending from a first end to a second end along a length of the quadrupole rod set, the first end of the auxiliary electrodes being located between the first end of the quadrupole rod set and the second end of the auxiliary electrodes, and the second end of the auxiliary electrodes being located between the first end of the auxiliary electrodes and the second end of the quadrupole rod set. In various embodiments, the controller is configured to apply a negative DC voltage to the auxiliary electrodes such that the first group of ions, which can have a negative polarity, are axially confined between the second end of the auxiliary electrodes and the second end electrode.
In accord with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the quadrupole rod set comprises Q3 in a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. In some aspects, the quadrupole rod set is contained within a vacuum chamber such that a base operating pressure is less than about 1×10−4 Torr. In various aspects, the system further comprises a gas source configured to introduce one or more pulses of a gas into said sub-volume. By way of example, the pulses of gas are configured to increase the pressure in said sub-volume in a range of about 6×10−5 Torr to about 5×10−4 Torr.
In accord with an aspect of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings, the auxiliary electrodes comprise T-electrodes. In some aspects, the T-electrodes can have an increasing depth of radial penetration along a length of the quadrupole rod set.
These and other features of the applicants' teaching are set forth herein.
A detailed description of various embodiments is provided herein below with reference, by way of example, to the following drawings. It will be understood that the drawings are exemplary only and that all reference to the drawings is made for the purpose of illustration only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the embodiments described herein below in any way. For convenience, reference numerals may also be repeated (with or without an offset) throughout the figures to indicate analogous components or features.
It will be appreciated that for clarity, the following discussion will explicate various aspects of embodiments of the applicants' teachings, but omitting certain specific details wherever convenient or appropriate to do so. For example, discussion of like or analogous features in alternative embodiments may be somewhat abbreviated. Well-known ideas or concepts may also for brevity not be discussed in any great detail. The skilled person will recognize that some embodiments of the applicants' teachings may not require certain of the specifically described details in every implementation, which are set forth herein only to provide a thorough understanding of the embodiments. Similarly it will be apparent that the described embodiments may be susceptible to slight alteration or variation according to common general knowledge without departing from the scope of the disclosure. The following detailed description of embodiments is not to be regarded as limiting the scope of the applicants' teachings in any manner.
While the systems, devices, and methods described herein can be used in conjunction with many different mass spectrometer systems, an exemplary mass spectrometer system 100 for such use is illustrated schematically in
In the exemplary embodiment depicted in
Because ion-ion reactions require ions of opposite polarities, one or more ion sources 102, 104 can be provided to generate the ions. As shown in
During operation of the mass spectrometer 100, ions generated by the ion sources 102, 104 can be extracted into a coherent ion beam by passing successively through apertures in an orifice plate 106 and a skimmer 108 to result in a narrow and highly focused ion beam. In various embodiments, an intermediate pressure chamber can be located between the orifice plate 106 and the skimmer 108 that can be evacuated to a pressure approximately in the range of about 1 Torr to about 4 Torr, though other pressures can be used for this or for other purposes. In some embodiments, upon passing through the skimmer 108, the ions can traverse one or more additional vacuum chambers and/or quadrupoles (e.g., a QJet® quadrupole) to provide additional focusing of and finer control over the ion beam using a combination of gas dynamics and radio frequency fields.
Ions generated by the ion source(s) 102, 104 can then enter the quadrupole rod set Q0, which can be operated as a collision focusing ion guide, for instance by collisionally cooling ions located therein. Q0 can be situated in a vacuum chamber and can be associated with a mechanical pump operable to evacuate the chamber to a pressure suitable to provide collisional cooling. For example, the vacuum chamber can be evacuated to a pressure approximately in the range of about 3 milliTorr to about 10 milliTorr, though other pressures can be used for this or for other purposes. Quadrupole rod set Q0 can be excited in RF-only mode to operate in conjunction with the pressure of vacuum chamber as a collimating quadrupole. A lens IQ1 can be disposed between the vacuum chamber of Q0 and the adjacent chamber to isolate the two chambers.
After passing through Q0, the ions can enter the adjacent quadrupole rod set Q1, which can be situated in a vacuum chamber that can be evacuated to a pressure approximately in the range of about 40 milliTorr to about 80 milliTorr, though other pressures can be used for this or for other purposes. As will be appreciated by a person of skill in the art, the quadrupole rod set Q1 can be operated as a conventional transmission RF/DC quadrupole mass filter that can be operated to select an ion of interest and/or a range of ions of interest. By way of example, the quadrupole rod set Q1 can be provided with RF/DC voltages suitable for operation in a mass-resolving mode. As should be appreciated, taking the physical and electrical properties of Q1 into account, parameters for an applied RF and DC voltage can be selected so that Q1 establishes a transmission window of chosen m/z ratios, such that these ions can traverse Q1 largely unperturbed. Ions having m/z ratios falling outside the window, however, do not attain stable trajectories within the quadrupole and are prevented from traversing the quadrupole rod set Q1. It should be appreciated that this mode of operation is but one possible mode of operation for Q1. By way of example, the lens IQ2 between Q1 and Q2 can be maintained at a much higher offset potential than Q1 such that ions entering the quadrupole rod set Q1 be operated as an ion trap. In such a manner, the potential applied to the entry lens IQ2 can be selectively lowered (e.g., mass selectively scanned) such that ions trapped in Q1 can be accelerated into Q2, which could also be operated as an ion trap, for example.
In some embodiments, a set of stubby rods can be provided between neighboring pairs of quadrupole rod sets to facilitate the transfer of ions between quadrupoles. The stubby rods can serve as a Brubaker lens and can help minimize interactions with any fringing fields that may have formed in the vicinity of an adjacent lens, for example, if the lens is maintained at an offset potential. By way of non-limiting example,
Ions passing through the quadrupole rod set Q1 can pass through the lens IQ2 and into the adjacent quadrupole rod set Q2, which as shown can be disposed in a pressurized compartment and can be configured to operate as a collision cell at a pressure approximately in the range of from about 1 mTorr to about 10 mTorr, though other pressures can be used for this or for other purposes. A suitable collision gas (e.g., nitrogen, argon, helium, etc.) can be provided by way of a gas inlet (not shown) to thermalize and/or fragment ions in the ion beam. In some embodiments, application of suitable RF/DC voltages to the quadrupole rod set Q2 and entrance and exit lenses IQ2 and IQ3 can provide optional mass filtering.
Ions that are transmitted by Q2 can pass into the adjacent quadrupole rod set Q3, which is bounded upstream by IQ3 and downstream by the exit lens 112. The quadrupole rod set Q3 can be situated in a vacuum chamber (e.g., 116 in
Following the reaction between the precursor ions and reagent ions of opposite polarity in the sub-volume 140 in Q3, residual precursor ions and product ions can be transmitted into the detector 114 through the exit lens 112. The detector 114 can then be operated in a manner known to those skilled in the art in view of the systems, devices, and methods described herein. As will be appreciated by a person skill in the art, any known detector, modified in accord with the teachings herein, can be used to detect the ions.
Referring now to
As shown in
With reference now to
As will be apparent to those of skill in the art, other auxiliary electrode configurations can also be used to generate an axial field along a portion of the length of Q3. By way of example, a series of ring electrodes disposed outside of the rod-like electrodes can be used to generate an axial field that terminates prior to the downstream end of Q3. Alternatively, for example, tilted or conical rods (e.g., LINAC electrodes) disposed between the rod-like electrodes can be used to generate an axial field that terminates prior to the downstream end of Q3.
Referring now to
As shown in step 1, reagent anions can be generated by an ion source (e.g., APCI 102) and driven through Q0, Q1, Q2, and Q3 by way of an increasing positive voltage between subsequent quadrupoles. For example, the positive DC voltage applied to Q2 can be greater than the positive DC voltage applied to Q1. As will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art, the electric potential between adjacent quadrupoles, and in light of the pressures therein, can be adjusted to control the reagent anions' energy as they traverse downstream through the mass spectrometer system. Additionally, each quadrupole can be configured to perform other functions as the ions traverse therethrough. By way of example, Q1 can be operated in an RF/DC mass filter mode to preferentially transmit the reagent ion of interest into Q2. An RF or negative DC potential can be applied to the exit lens 112 to prevent axial transmission of the reagent anions into the detector 114. As will be appreciated by a person skilled in the art, the reagent anions can traverse the mass spectrometer as a continuous beam or a pulse of ions.
As shown in step 2, as the ions traverse Q3 towards the exit lens 112, a negative DC voltage can be applied to the auxiliary electrodes 120, thereby generating an axial field along a portion of the length of Q3. As depicted, the axial field can terminate at the downstream end of the auxiliary electrodes 112, thereby creating a negative DC potential barrier effective to repulse the reagent anions. Accordingly, reagent anions can be trapped in a sub-volume 140 of Q3 between the downstream end of the auxiliary electrodes 120 and the exit lens 112. After the reagent anions trapped in the sub-volume 140 have sufficiently cooled, the negative DC voltage applied to the exit lens 112 can be replaced by an RF voltage that can continue to repel the reagent anions from the exit lens 112, as depicted in step 3.
As shown in step 4, precursor cations can then be generated by an ion source (e.g., ESI 104). The precursor cations can be driven through Q0, Q1, Q2, and Q3 by way of a negative voltage increasing in amplitude between subsequent quadrupoles. For example, the negative DC voltage applied to Q2 can be greater in amplitude than the negative DC voltage applied to Q1. As above, Q1, for example, can also operate in RF/DC mode to preferentially transmit the precursor cations. As will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art, the electric potential between adjacent quadrupoles, in light of the pressures therein, can be adjusted to control the cations' energies as they traverse the mass spectrometer system 100 and enter Q3. For example, the energy of the cations as they enter the trap can be less than about 10 eV.
As shown in step 5, after the precursor cations enter Q3, the IQ3 voltage can be replaced by a positive DC voltage and/or an RF voltage to trap the precursor cations within Q3 and allow for their thermalization. As the precursor cations initially traverse Q3, the RF voltage applied to the exit lens 112 can be effective to repulse the precursor cations back towards IQ3 while the reagent anions remain trapped in the sub-volume 140. Because of the reduced pressure in Q3 relative to that typical in Q2, the thermalization period of the precursor cations can be relatively long. As a result, the precursor cations can be repulsed one or more times by the RF barrier exit lens 112 and the RF/DC barrier IQ3, thereby allowing for multiple interactions between the precursor cations and reagent anions as the precursor cations pass through the sub-volume 140. After cooling and/or reacting with the reagent anions, residual precursor cations and positively-charged product ions can settle in the negative potential well generated by the auxiliary electrodes 120.
In various embodiments, the reagent anions can then be ejected from Q3, for example, by replacing the RF voltage applied to the exit lens 112 with a positive DC voltage, as shown in step 6. In step 7, the DC voltage applied to the auxiliary electrodes 120 can then be turned off and the residual precursor cations and/or positively-charged product cations can then be ejected out of Q3 through the exit lens 112 and into the detector 114. For example, the residual precursor and/or product ions can be subjected to mass selective axial ejection (MSAE) to allow for their detection, as is described in more detail in U.S. Pat. No. 6,177,668, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Though the illustrated sequence depicts potentials for the trapping of reagent anions in a sub-volume 140 of Q3 and the subsequent passage therethrough and trapping of precursor cations in Q3, one of skill in the art will appreciate that the timing and potential schematic depicted in
With reference now to
Accordingly, in various embodiments, pulses of the neutral gas can temporarily raise the base operating pressure in Q3′ to a pressure in a range of about 6×10−5 Torr to about 5×10−4 Torr during periods of interaction between the ions substantially confined within the sub-volume 540 and those ions of opposite polarity that pass therethrough. By way of example, collisional dampening of the cations' axial movement towards the exit lens 512 can aid in axially confining the cations within Q3′. Without being bound by any particular theory, the neutral gas can thermalize the cations passing through the sub-volume 540 and/or ensure mixing of the various populations of ions. Other details regarding the use of a pulsed valve can be found in U.S. Ser. No. 12/359,526, entitled “Method of Operating a Linear Ion Trap to Provide Low Pressure Short Time High Amplitude Excitation with Pulsed Pressure” and filed Jan. 26, 2009 which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, and modified in accord with the teachings herein.
With reference now to
As will be appreciated by a person skilled in the art, one or more power supplies controlled by a controller can be effective to apply electric potentials with RF, AC, and DC components to the quadrupole rods, the various lenses, and auxiliary electrodes to control the radial and axial movement of the ions as otherwise discussed herein. The controller can be linked to the various components in order to provide joint control over the timing sequences executed by these elements. Accordingly, the controller can be configured to provide control signals to the power source(s) supplying the various components in a coordinated fashion in order to control the mass spectrometer system to provide for ion-ion reactions as otherwise discussed herein.
By way of example, as shown in
With reference now to
d) depicts experimental mass spectral data obtained using a method for performing ion-ion reactions in Q3 in accord with aspects of various embodiments of the applicants' teachings. In this non-limiting example, reagent anions were first injected into a Q3 as generally configured as shown in
With reference now to
With reference now to
Accordingly, unlike prior art systems and methods that utilize the static higher pressure Q2 collision cell to trap ions simultaneously for ion-ion reactions, in various embodiments according the methods and systems described herein, the Q3 quadrupole rod set can be modified to perform high efficiency ion-ion reactions. Though not bound by any particular theory, it is believed that various embodiments of the methods and systems described herein can capture a first ion group in a sub-volume of the quadrupole rod set while ions of the opposite polarity are trapped in a dynamic confinement region which at least partially overlaps with the sub-volume during at least a portion of the trapping of the second group. Unlike mutual storage techniques (which occur at a single energy and rely on lower energy interactions) and pass-through techniques (in which precursor cations traverse the multipole a single time at a single energy level), methods and systems in accord with various embodiments of the teachings herein can enable precursor cations, for example, to make multiple passes through the reagent anions contained within the sub-volume, thereby increasing interaction time and promoting interaction of the ions at different energy levels.
It will be appreciated that the mass spectrometer system 100 described herein is but one possible configuration that can be used according to aspects of the systems, devices, and methods disclosed herein. For example, although the quadrupoles Q0, Q1, Q2, and Q3 have been described as having configurations and modes designed to achieve a particular purpose, a person skilled in the art will recognize that each of the quadrupoles can also have other configurations and be operated in other modes depending at least in part on the desired mass spectrometer application. Further, it will be appreciated that various aspects of the described teachings can be applied to other components of a mass spectrometer system. By way of example, various aspects of the teachings herein can be applied to trap ions of a first polarity in a sub-volume of Q2, for example. Other non-limiting, exemplary embodiments of mass spectrometers that can be used in conjunction with the systems, devices, and methods disclosed herein can be found, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,923,681, entitled “Collision Cell for Mass Spectrometer,” which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Other configurations, including but not limited to those described herein and others known to those skilled in the art, can also be utilized in conjunction with the systems, devices, and methods disclosed herein.
While the above description provides examples and specific details of various embodiments, it will be appreciated that some features and/or functions of the described embodiments admit to modification without departing from the scope of the described embodiments. The above description is intended to be illustrative of the applicants' teachings, the scope of which is limited only by the language of the claims appended hereto.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application No. 61/581,783, filed Dec. 30, 2011, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/002616 | 12/6/2012 | WO | 00 | 6/30/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61581783 | Dec 2011 | US |