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1.
2.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites are common DNA lesions arising from spontaneous hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond and base-excision repair mechanisms of the modified bases. Due to the strong association of AP site formation with physically/chemically induced DNA damage, quantifying AP sites provides important information for risk assessment of exposure to genotoxins and oxidative stress. However, rigorous quantification of AP sites in DNA has been hampered by technical problems relating to the sensitivity and selectivity of existing analytical methods. We have developed a new isotope dilution liquid chromatography–coupled tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method for the rigorous quantification of AP sites in genomic DNA. The method entails enzymatic digestion of AP site-containing DNA by endo- and exonucleases, derivatization with pentafluorophenylhydrazine (PFPH), addition of an isotopically labeled PFPH derivative as internal standard, and quantification by LC-MS/MS. The combination of PFPH derivatization with LC-MS/MS analysis on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer allows for sensitive and selective quantification of AP sites in DNA at a detection limit of 6.5 fmol, corresponding to 4 AP sites/109 nt in 5 μg of DNA, which is at least ten times more sensitive than existing analytical methods. The protocol was validated by AP site-containing oligonucleotides and applied in quantifying methyl methanesulfonate-induced formation of AP sites in cellular DNA.
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Chemistry of apurinic/apyrimidinic site formation  相似文献   

3.
We describe preparation and use of the quaternary ammonium-based α-iodoacetamide QDE and its isotopologue *QDE as reagents for chemoselective derivatization of cellular thiols. Direct addition of the reagents to live cells followed by adduct extraction into n-butanol and analysis by FT-ICR-MS provided a registry of matched isotope peaks from which molecular formulae of thiol metabolites were derived. Acidification to pH 4 during cell lysis and adduct formation further improves the chemoselectivity for thiol derivatization. Examination of A549 human lung adenocarcinoma cells using this approach revealed cysteine, cysteinylglycine, glutathione, and homocysteine as principal thiol metabolites as well as the sulfinic acid hypotaurine. The method is also readily applied to quantify the thiol metabolites, as demonstrated here by the quantification of both glutathione and glutathione disulfide in A549 cells at concentrations of 34.4?±?11.5 and 10.1?±?4.0 nmol/mg protein, respectively.
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4.
Stable isotope dilution–selective reaction monitoring–mass spectrometry (SID-SRM-MS) has been widely used for the absolute quantitative analysis of proteins. However, when performing the large-scale absolute quantification of proteins from a more complex tissue sample, such as mouse liver, in addition to a high-throughput approach for the preparation and calibration of large amounts of stable-isotope-labelled internal standards, a more powerful separation method prior to SRM analysis is also urgently needed. To address these challenges, a high-throughput absolute quantification strategy based on an improved two-dimensional reversed-phase (2D RP) separation and quantification concatemer (QconCAT) approach is presented in this study. This strategy can be used to perform the simultaneous quantification of hundreds of proteins from mouse liver within one week of total MS measurement time. By using calibrated synthesised peptides from the protein glutathione S-transferase (GST), large amounts of GST-tagged QconCAT internal standards corresponding to hundreds of proteins can be accurately and rapidly quantified. Additionally, using an improved 2D RP separation method, a mixture containing a digested sample and QconCAT standards can be efficiently separated and absolutely quantified. When a maximum gradient of 72 min is employed in the first LC dimension, resulting in 72 fractions, identification and absolute quantification experiments for all fractions can be completed within one week of total MS measurement time. The quantification approach developed here can further extend the dynamic range and increase the analytical sensitivity of SRM analysis of complex tissue samples, thereby helping to increase the coverage of absolute quantification in a whole proteome.
Figure
High-throughput absolute quantification of proteins by an improved 2D RP separation and QconCAT approach  相似文献   

5.
Novel peptides were identified in the skin secretion of the tree frog Hyla savignyi. Skin secretions were collected by mild electrical stimulation. Peptides were separated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Mass spectra were acquired by electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS), and fragment ion spectra were obtained after collision-induced dissociation and electron capture dissociation. Peptides were analyzed by manual de novo sequencing and composition-based sequencing (CBS). Sequence analyses of three so far undescribed, structurally unrelated peptides are presented in this paper, having the sequences DDSEEEEVE-OH, P*EEVEEERJK-OH, and GJJDPJTGJVGGJJ-NH2. The glutamate-rich sequences are assumed to be acidic spacer peptides of the prepropeptide. One of these peptides contains the modified amino acid hydroxyproline, as identified and localized by high-accuracy FTICR-MS. Combination of CBS and of experience-based manual sequence analysis as complementary and database-independent sequencing strategies resulted in peptide identification with high reliability.
Figure
So-far unknown natural frog skin peptides were identified by high-resolution CID and ECD MS/MS and by composition-based de novo sequencing. Sequences were confirmed by comparison of MS/MS spectra with synthesized analogs  相似文献   

6.
Targeted absolute protein quantification yields valuable information about physiological adaptation of organisms and is thereby of high interest. Especially for this purpose, two proteomic mass spectrometry-based techniques namely selective reaction monitoring (SRM) and precursor reaction monitoring (PRM) are commonly applied. The objective of this study was to establish an optimal quantification assay for proteins with the focus on those involved in housekeeping functions and putative reductive dehalogenase proteins from the strictly anaerobic bacterium Dehalococcoides mccartyi strain CBDB1. This microbe is small and slow-growing; hence, it provides little biomass for comprehensive proteomic analysis. We therefore compared SRM and PRM techniques. Eleven peptides were successfully quantified by both methods. In addition, six peptides were solely quantified by SRM and four by PRM, respectively. Peptides were spiked into a background of Escherichia coli lysate and the majority of peptides were quantifiable down to 500 amol absolute on column by both methods. Peptide quantification in CBDB1 lysate resulted in the detection of 15 peptides using SRM and 14 peptides with the PRM assay. Resulting quantification of five dehalogenases revealed copy numbers of <10 to 115 protein molecules per cell indicating clear differences in abundance of RdhA proteins during growth on hexachlorobenzene. Our results indicated that both methods show comparable sensitivity and that the combination of the mass spectrometry assays resulted in higher peptide coverage and thus more reliable protein quantification.
Figure
Dehalococcoides mccartyi strain CBDB1 cultivated on hexachlorobenzene were used to compare two targeted peptide quantification assays for reductive dehalogenases, namely selective reaction monitoring (SRM) and precursor reaction monitoring (PRM)  相似文献   

7.
N-Linked glycosylation is a major protein modification involved in many essential cellular functions. Methods capable of quantitative glycan analysis are highly valuable and have been actively pursued. Here we describe a novel N-glycosylamine-based strategy for isotopic labeling of N-linked glycans for quantitative analysis by use of mass spectrometry (MS). This strategy relies on the primary amine group on the reducing end of freshly released N-linked glycans for labeling, and eliminates the need for the harsh labeling reaction conditions and/or tedious cleanup procedures required by existing methods. By using NHS-ester amine chemistry we used this strategy to label N-linked glycans from a monoclonal antibody with commercially available tandem mass tags (TMT). Only duplex experiments can be performed with currently available TMT reagents, because quantification is based on the intensity of intact labeled glycans. Under mild reaction conditions, greater than 95 % derivatization was achieved in 30 min and the labeled glycans, when kept at ?20 °C, were stable for more than 10 days. By performing glycan release, TMT labeling, and LC–MS analysis continuously in a single volatile aqueous buffer without cleanup steps, we were able to complete the entire analysis in less than 2 h. Quantification was highly accurate and the dynamic range was large. Compared with previously established methods, N-glycosylamine-mediated labeling has the advantages of experimental simplicity, efficient labeling, and preserving glycan integrity.
Principle of N-Glycosylamine-mediated isotope labeling for mass spectrometry-based quantitative analysis of N-linked glycans  相似文献   

8.
Noncovalent interactions govern how molecules communicate. Mass spectrometry is an important and versatile tool for the analysis of noncovalent complexes (NCX). Electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) is the most widely used MS technique for the study of NCXs because of its softer ionization and easy compatibility with the solution phase of NCX mixtures. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) has also been used to study NCXs. However, successful analysis depends upon several experimental factors, such as matrix selection, solution pH, and instrumental parameters. In this study, we employ MALDI imaging mass spectrometry to investigate the location and formation of NCXs, involving both peptides and proteins, in a MALDI sample spot.
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9.
The aim of this work is to compare simultaneous isotope dilution analysis of organotin and organomercury compounds by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) and gas chromatography–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (GC–ICP/MS) on certified bivalve samples. These samples were extracted by microwave with tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH). Derivatization with both NaBEt4 and NaBPr4 was evaluated, and analytical performances were compared. Two CRM materials, BCR-710 and CRM-477, were analyzed by both techniques to verify accuracy. A mixed spike containing 201Hg-enriched methylmercury (MeHg), 199Hg-enriched inorganic mercury (iHg), 119Sn-enriched monobutyltin (MBT), dibutyltin (DBT), and tributyltin (TBT) as well as homemade 116Sn-enriched monophenyltin (MPT), diphenyltin (DPT), and triphenyltin (TPT) was used for the isotope dilution analysis of samples. The two techniques studied were compared in terms of classic analytical parameters: linearity, precision or repeatability (i.e., percent relative standard deviation, RSD%), limit of detection (LOD), and limit of quantification (LOQ), showing excellent linearity, precision below 12 % for all analytes, and LOQs of 0.06–1.45 pg for GC–MS and 0.02–0.27 pg for GC–ICP/MS.
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10.
Protein oxidation is typically associated with oxidative stress and aging and affects protein function in normal and pathological processes. Additionally, deliberate oxidative labeling is used to probe protein structure and protein–ligand interactions in hydroxyl radical protein footprinting (HRPF). Oxidation often occurs at multiple sites, leading to mixtures of oxidation isomers that differ only by the site of modification. We utilized sets of synthetic, isomeric “oxidized” peptides to test and compare the ability of electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) and collision-induced dissociation (CID), as well as nano-ultra high performance liquid chromatography (nanoUPLC) separation, to quantitate oxidation isomers with one oxidation at multiple adjacent sites in mixtures of peptides. Tandem mass spectrometry by ETD generates fragment ion ratios that accurately report on relative oxidative modification extent on specific sites, regardless of the charge state of the precursor ion. Conversely, CID was found to generate quantitative MS/MS product ions only at the higher precursor charge state. Oxidized isomers having multiple sites of oxidation in each of two peptide sequences in HRPF product of protein Robo-1 Ig1-2, a protein involved in nervous system axon guidance, were also identified and the oxidation extent at each residue was quantified by ETD without prior liquid chromatography (LC) separation. ETD has proven to be a reliable technique for simultaneous identification and relative quantification of a variety of functionally different oxidation isomers, and is a valuable tool for the study of oxidative stress, as well as for improving spatial resolution for HRPF studies.
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11.
In biological systems, carbon-centered small molecule radicals are primarily formed via external radiation or internal radical reactions. These radical species can react with a variety of biomolecules, most notably nucleic acids, the consequence of which has possible links to gene mutation and cancer. Sulfur-containing peptides and proteins are reactive toward a variety of radical species and many of them behave as radical scavengers. In this study, the reactions between alkyl alcohol carbon-centered radicals (e.g., ?CH2OH for methanol) and cysteinyl peptides within a nanoelectrospray ionization (nanoESI) plume were explored. The reaction system involved ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of a nanoESI plume using a low pressure mercury lamp consisting of 185 and 254 nm emission bands. The alkyl alcohol was added as solvent into the nanoESI solution and served as the precursor of hydroxyalkyl radicals upon UV irradiation. The hydroxyalkyl radicals subsequently reacted with cysteinyl peptides either containing a disulfide linkage or free thiol, which led to the formation of peptide-S-hydroxyalkyl product. This radical reaction coupled with subsequent MS/MS was shown to have analytical potential by cleaving intrachain disulfide linked peptides prior to CID to enhance sequence information. Tandem mass spectrometry via collision-induced dissociation (CID), stable isotope labeling, and accurate mass measurement were employed to verify the identities of the reaction products.
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12.
Protein citrullination is a posttranslational modification where peptidylarginine is enzymatically deiminated to form peptidylcitrulline. Although the role of protein citrullination in both health and disease is being increasingly recognised, techniques available to identify citrullinated proteins and to map their citrullination site(s) are rare and often show poor sensitivity. Here, we present a sensitive technique for specific modification and selective enrichment of citrullinated peptides from complex biological samples. The technique is based on highly specific in-solution biotinylation of citrulline residues followed by selective enrichment of modified peptides using streptavidin beads. We demonstrate that a synthetic citrulline-containing peptide can be selectively enriched when less than 0.5 pmol is spiked into a highly heterogeneous peptide mixture. After enrichment, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) analysis of an aliquot of the streptavidin eluate corresponding to theoretically 50 fmol of the spiked-in peptide showed a prominent signal. We further demonstrate the sensitivity of our technique by enrichment of citrullinated peptides from enzymatically deiminated myelin basic protein (MBP), when 10 pmol was spiked into a heterogeneous biological digest. In MALDI-TOF MS analysis, six MBP-derived citrullinated peptides were observed, showing the efficiency of this enrichment strategy. The high sensitivity combined with the remarkable specificity of the described technique makes it a valuable tool for elucidating citrullination in various biological processes.
Figure
Schematic view of the established technique for modification and enrichment of citrullinated peptides (top). Enrichment of the synthetic peptide RPSQ-Cit-HGSK (0.5 pmol) from a complex sample (8.2 nmol) (bottom). After enrichment an amount corresponding to 50 fmol of the spiked-in peptide was analysed and is observed as a prominent signal (m/z 1569.85)  相似文献   

13.
14.
The detection and identification of proteins adsorbed onto biomaterial surfaces under ambient conditions has significant experimental advantages but has proven to be difficult to achieve with conventional measuring technologies. In this study, we present an adaptation of desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) and liquid extraction surface analysis (LESA) mass spectrometry (MS) coupled with in-situ surface tryptic digestion to identify protein species from a biomaterial surface. Cytochrome c, myoglobin, and BSA in a combination of single and mixture spots were printed in an array format onto Permanox slides, followed by in-situ surface digestion and detection via MS. Automated tandem MS performed on surface peptides was able to identify the proteins via MASCOT. Limits of detection were determined for DESI-MS and a comparison of DESI and LESA-MS peptide spectra characteristics and sensitivity was made. DESI-MS images of the arrays were produced and analyzed with imaging multivariate analysis to automatically separate peptide peaks for each of the proteins within a mixture into distinct components. This is the first time that DESI and LESA-MS have been used for the in-situ detection of surface digested proteins on biomaterial surfaces and presents a promising proof of concept for the use of ambient MS in the rapid and automated analysis of surface proteins.
Graphical abstract
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15.
We present new tags based on the derivatives of phenylboronic acid and apply them for the selective detection of sugars and peptide-sugar conjugates in mass spectrometry. We investigated the binding of phenylboronic acid and its quaternary ammonium salt (QAS) derivatives to carbohydrates and peptide-derived Amadori products by HR-MS and MS/MS experiments. The formation of complexes between sugar or sugar-peptide conjugates and synthetic tags was confirmed on the basis of the unique isotopic distribution resulting from the presence of boron atom. Moreover, incorporation of a quaternary ammonium salt dramatically improved the efficiency of ionization in mass spectrometry. It was found that the formation of a complex with phenylboronic acid stabilizes the sugar moiety in glycated peptides, resulting in simplification of the fragmentation pattern of peptide-derived Amadori products. The obtained results suggest that derivatization of phenylboronic acid as QAS is a promising method for sensitive ESI-MS detection of carbohydrates and their conjugates formed by non-enzymatic glycation or glycosylation.
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16.
Ambient desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (ADI-MS) has developed into an important analytical field over the last 9 years. The ability to analyze samples under ambient conditions while retaining the sensitivity and specificity of mass spectrometry has led to numerous applications and a corresponding jump in the popularity of this field. Despite the great potential of ADI-MS, problems remain in the areas of ion identification and quantification. Difficulties with ion identification can be solved through modified instrumentation, including accurate-mass or MS/MS capabilities for analyte identification. More difficult problems include quantification because of the ambient nature of the sampling process. To characterize and improve sample volatilization, ionization, and introduction into the mass spectrometer interface, a method of visualizing mass transport into the mass spectrometer is needed. Schlieren imaging is a well-established technique that renders small changes in refractive index visible. Here, schlieren imaging was used to visualize helium flow from a plasma-based ADI-MS source into a mass spectrometer while ion signals were recorded. Optimal sample positions for melting-point capillary and transmission-mode (stainless steel mesh) introduction were found to be near (within 1 mm of) the mass spectrometer inlet. Additionally, the orientation of the sampled surface plays a significant role. More efficient mass transport resulted for analyte deposits directly facing the MS inlet. Different surfaces (glass slide and rough surface) were also examined; for both it was found that the optimal position is immediately beneath the MS inlet.
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17.
To extract a genuine peptide signal from a mass spectrum, an observed series of peaks at a particular mass can be compared with the isotope distribution expected for a peptide of that mass. To decide whether the observed series of peaks is similar to the isotope distribution, a similarity measure is needed. In this short communication, we investigate whether the Mahalanobis distance could be an alternative measure for the commonly employed Pearson’s χ2 statistic. We evaluate the performance of the two measures by using a controlled MALDI-TOF experiment. The results indicate that Pearson’s χ2 statistic has better discriminatory performance than the Mahalanobis distance and is a more robust measure.
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18.
Drug monitoring is usually performed by liquid chromatography coupled with optical detection or electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. More recently, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) in combination with triple quadrupole or Fourier-transform (FT) mass analyzers has also been reported to allow accurate quantification. Here, we present a strategy that employs standard MALDI time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) for the sensitive and accurate quantification of saquinavir from an extract of blood peripheral mononuclear cells. Unambiguous identification of saquinavir in the mass spectra was possible because of using internal mass calibration and by an overall low chemical noise in the low mass range. Exact mass determination of the constant background peaks of the cell extract, which were used for recalibration, was performed by an initial MALDI-FT-MS analysis. Fast and multiplexed sample analysis was enabled by microarray technology, which provided 10 replicates in the lower nL range for each sample in parallel lanes on a chip. In order to validate the method, we employed various statistical tests, such as confidence intervals for linear regressions, three quality control samples, and inverse confidence limits of the estimated concentration ratios.
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19.
It is common practice to quantify the mass concentration of a peptide solution through quantitative determination of selected chemically stable amino acids produced following complete hydrolysis of the parent peptide. This is because there is generally an insufficient quantity of material available to allow for the obvious alternative of a direct purity analysis characterization of the parent peptide, and the subsequent constitution of a calibration solution. However, selected accurately characterized pure peptide reference materials are required to establish reference points for the dissemination of metrologically traceable measurements and to develop reference measurement systems for laboratory medicine. In principle, purity assignment of a peptide can be performed by using the so-called mass balance approach, by employing a range of analytical techniques to obtain an estimate of the mass fraction content of all impurities present in the intact peptide, and by utilizing the difference from the theoretical limit value to assign the mass fraction content of the main peptide. Liquid chromatography–high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry (LC-hrMS/MS) is a key technique for the detection, identification, and determination of structurally related impurities present in a peptide material, and experiments characterizing the model peptide hormone angiotensin I (ANG I) are described in the present work. Degradation products that were generated from ANG I after storage at elevated temperatures were screened. The formation of peptide fragments such as ANG II or ANG III was determined by comparison of measured mass values with calculated mass values. The use of a data-dependent acquisition technique enabled the detection and structural characterization of ANG II and other peptide fragments as major impurities in the same LC-hrMS/MS analysis run. Subsequent quantification using external calibration allowed the mass fraction of the major impurities in a candidate reference material to be estimated as 10.4 mg/g. Failure to correct for these impurities would lead to a 1 % error in the determination of the concentration of the peptide in solution by amino acid analysis techniques.
Figure
Angiotensin I (ANG I): hrMS/MS spectrum, chemical formula, and amino acid sequence  相似文献   

20.
We have studied sample preparation conditions to increase the reproducibility of positive UV-MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry of peptides in the amol range. By evaluating several α-cyano-4-hydroxy-cinnamic acid (CHCA) matrix batches and preparation protocols, it became apparent that two factors have a large influence on the reproducibility and the quality of the generated peptide mass spectra: (1) the selection of the CHCA matrix, which allows the most sensitive measurements and an easier finding of the “sweet spots,” and (2) the amount of the sample volume deposited onto the thin crystalline matrix layer. We have studied in detail the influence of a contaminant, coming from commercial CHCA matrix batches, on sensitivity of generated peptide mass spectra in the amol as well as fmol range of a tryptic peptide mixture. The structure of the contaminant, N,N-dimethylbutyl amine, was determined by applying MALDI-FT-ICR mass spectrometry experiments for elemental composition and MALDI high energy CID experiments utilizing a tandem mass spectrometer (TOF/RTOF). A recrystallization of heavily contaminated CHCA batches that reduces or eliminates the determined impurity is described. Furthermore, a fast and reliable method for the assessment of CHCA matrix batches prior to tryptic peptide MALDI mass spectrometric analyses is presented.
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