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1.
An API 3000 triple-quadrupole instrument and a QSTAR Pulsar quadrupole time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer were compared for the determination of phosphopeptides by precursor ion scanning in both the positive and negative nanoelectrospray ionization modes. The limits of detection for synthetic phosphopeptides were similar (500 amol microl(-1)) for both types of instruments when monitoring precursors of -79 Da (PO(3)(-)). However, the quadrupole TOF system was approximately fivefold more sensitive (1 fmol microl(-1)) than the triple-quadrupole instrument (5 fmol microl(-1)) when monitoring precursors of 216 Da (immonium ion of phosphotyrosine). The recently introduced Q(2)-pulsing function, which enhances the transmission of fragment ions of a selected m/z window from the collision cell into the TOF part, improved the sensitivity of precursor ion scans on a quadrupole TOF instrument. The selectivity of precursor ion scans is much better on quadrupole TOF systems than on triple quadrupoles because the high resolving power of the reflectron-TOF mass analyzer permits high-accuracy fragment ion selection at no expense of sensitivity. This minimizes interferences from other peptide fragment ions (a-, b-, and y- type) of the same nominal mass but with sufficient differences in their exact masses. As a result, the characteristic immonium ion of phosphotyrosine at m/z 216.043 can be utilized for the selective detection of tyrosine phosphorylated peptides. Our data suggest that, in addition to their superior performance for peptide sequencing, quadrupole TOF instruments also offer a very viable alternative to triple quadrupoles for precursor ion scanning, thus combining high sensitivity and selectivity for both MS and MS/MS experiments in one instrument.  相似文献   

2.
Although numerous strategies have been devised to analyze protein phosphorylation, an abundant intracellular protein modification, there is still a need for different methods for the analysis of this modification. A method to both detect and localize the phosphorylation within a protein/peptide is especially required. In this paper, a new strategy is described, which makes use of beta-elimination/Michael addition reactions to introduce a functional group at the original site of phosphorylation, which gives rise to a dimethylamine-containing sulfenic acid derivative with a unique m/z value. This enables the detection of the phosphorylated species within peptide mixtures by sensitive and specific precursor ion scanning in positive ion mode. Working under acidic conditions in positive ion mode has the added advantage that subsequent normal peptide sequencing for the exact localization can be performed. No other peptide derived fragment ion is observed at the m/z value of the sulfenic acid derivative formed, thus specific precursor ion experiments can also be carried out on instruments with low fragment ion resolution and lends itself to LC-MS/MS approaches when skimmer fragmentation routines or triple quadrupole mass spectrometers are used.  相似文献   

3.
Recent mass spectrometry instrumentation developments include the appearance of novel hybrid tandem instrumentation, Q-TOF, consisting of a quadrupole mass analyzer (MS1) and a time-of-flight (TOF) analyzer. The TOF analyzer is not scanned, but collects all fragment ions entering the analyzer at a given time. Thus, the typical precursor scan experiment cannot be performed. Instead, a full MS-MS spectrum can be acquired for each mass passed by MS1. Appropriate data manipulation, i.e. extracted ion current chromatograms, can correlate specific fragment ion formation to the parent ion. Precursor scanning and LC-MS-MS are compared on a Q-TOF instrument for the determination of protein modifications, including acetylation and phosphorylation. Model peptides used for phosphopeptide detection were generated from a mixture of beta-casein. Model acetylated peptides were generated from a mixture of acetylated substance P1-9 and substance P1-11. The results were then applied to a more complex mixture, a digest of HIV-p24. Results indicate that precursor scanning is useful for screening, but that LC-MS-MS has a sensitivity advantage and is less susceptible to suppression effects. LC-MS-MS, therefore, appears to be better for the detection of trace components in complex mixtures.  相似文献   

4.
A novel matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation quadrupole ion trap time-of-flight (MALDI QIT ToF) mass spectrometer has been used to analyse high mass peptide ions exceeding 2000 Da. Human adrenocorticotropic hormone (fragment 18-39) and oxidised bovine insulin chain B were utilised to evaluate the performance of the instrument both in MS and in MS/MS mode. Its ability to efficiently isolate ions and to fragment them using collisionally activated decomposition (CAD) has been demonstrated using mixtures diluted to the low-femtomole level on target. Additionally, multiple stage mass spectrometry (MS/MS/MS) provides a second-generation product ion spectrum in which new fragment ions are detected and new stretches of amino acids are identified.  相似文献   

5.
O-Fucosylation is an unusual posttranslational modification present in several proteins that play important roles in physiological processes such as coagulation, cell signaling and metastasis. Although the exact function of the modification is still unclear, the number of proteins found to be modified is increasing, and there is a need for further structural and functional analyses. Here we report on a rapid and straightforward approach in the analysis of glycosylation status and determination of glycosylation sites in O-fucosylated glycopeptides using nano-electrospray quadrupole time-of-flight (nano-ESI Q-TOF) mass spectrometry. In a single measurement of previously chemically untreated O-fucosylated peptides originating from the thrombospondin-1 repeats, we were able to determine the glycosylation status of the analyzed peptide, the glycosylation site, and the glycan structure. The abundance of glycosylated peptide fragment ions in MS(2) spectra suggests that nano-ESI Q-TOF mass spectrometry can be used as a general approach in structural studies of O-fucosylation in proteins.  相似文献   

6.
A novel mass spectrometric method for the selective detection of specific protein-ligand complexes is presented. The new method is based on electrosonic spray ionization of samples containing protein and ligand molecules, and mass spectrometric detection using the precursor ion scanning function on a triple quadrupole instrument. Mass-selected intact protein-ligand complex ions are subjected to fragmentation by means of collision-induced dissociation in the collision cell of the instrument, while the second mass analyzer is set to the m/z of protonated ligand ions or their alkali metal adducts. The method allows for the detection of only those ions which yield ions characteristic of the ligand molecules upon fragmentation. Since the scan range of first analyzer is set well above the m/z of the ligand ion, and the CID conditions are established to permit fragmentation of only loosely bound, noncovalent complexes, the method is specific to the detection of protein-ligand complexes under described conditions. Behavior of biologically specific and nonspecific complexes was compared under various instrumental settings. Parameters were optimized to obtain maximal selectivity for specific complexes. Specific and nonspecific complexes were found to show markedly different fragmentation characteristics, which can be a basis for selective detection of complexes with biological relevance. Preparation of specific and nonspecific complexes containing identical building blocks was attempted. Complex ions with identical stoichiometry but different origin showed the expected difference in fragmentation characteristics, which gives direct evidence for the different mechanism of specific versus nonspecific complex ion formation.  相似文献   

7.
An ion mobility cell of a novel type was coupled to an orthogonal injection time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer. The mobility cell operates at low-pressure and contains a segmented RF ion guide providing an axial electric field that drives the ions towards the exit. A flow of gas is arranged inside the ion guide in such a way that the gas drag counteracts the force exerted by the axial field. Ions with different mobility coefficients can be scanned out of the ion guide by ramping the axial field strength. The ions can be analyzed intact or fragmented in a collision cell before introduction into an orthogonal TOF mass spectrometer. An ion source with matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) was attached to the instrument. The setup was evaluated for the analysis of peptide and protein mixture, with sequential fragmentation of multiple precursor ions from a protein digest and with mobility separation of fragment ions formed by in-source fragmentation of pure peptides. The mobility resolution for peptides was observed to be three times higher than the theoretical resolution predicted for a classical mobility setup with similar operating conditions (pressure, field strength, and length).  相似文献   

8.
A tandem quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometer has been programmed such that phosphorylated peptides can automatically be discovered and identified in a way similar to that of the use of precursor ion or neutral loss scanning, but without the need to scan the quadrupole mass filter. Instead, the method capitalizes on the innate capability of the Q-TOF to record mass spectra and product ion spectra quickly, with good sensitivity and with good mass accuracy. Alternate mass spectra, with and without fragmentation, are recorded at high and low collision energy with the quadrupole operating in wideband mode. The method of analysis is both compatible with and dependant on liquid chromatography for separation of complex mixtures. The method has been demonstrated by searching for the neutral loss of 98 Da (H3PO4) from phosphoserine and phosphothreonine residues, or for the phosphorylated immonium ion at m/z 216 from phosphotyrosine. The method also incorporates acquisition of the product ion spectrum from any candidate precursor ions, thereby allowing confirmation of the neutral loss or product ion and providing additional sequence information to assist identification of the protein and assign the site of phosphorylation.  相似文献   

9.
The product ion spectra obtained by electrospray ionization (ESI) ion trap instruments exhibit a higher number of fragment ions than those achieved by other ion-trap-based systems, indicating the presence of more effective energy deposition mechanisms. This behavior can be attributed to several different reasons, among which different initial internal energy of the precursor ions, pre-activation due to collisions taking place outside the trap, different target gas mixtures inside the trap, and different ion trap geometry were considered. Data obtained from experiments using a triple quadrupole instrument, CI-ion trap, and ESI-ion trap have been compared. The results so achieved seem to indicate that the presence inside the trap of neutral molecules of the solvent employed for the ESI process have a relevant role, promoting high energy deposition in the colliding ions.  相似文献   

10.
Signal losses due to precursor ion isolation in a quadrupole-ion-trap mass spectrometer were studied using selected pesticides as model compounds. These signal losses originate from isolations of ion populations employing the broadband isolation (bbiso) waveform used in the Varian quadrupole ion-trap precursor ion isolation protocol. Signal losses were found to be ‘precursor ion structure’ dependent upon isolation using the bbiso. The effect of the bbiso waveform on the ionic structure and nature of substituents on the precursor ion was investigated. Isolation of old electron radical molecular ions of the type [M+?] showed remarkable signal losses compared with isolation of fragment ions derived from the same compounds. The impact of the bbiso waveform on the response of the instrument using mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry and the bbiso waveform was also examined. The response of the instrument as related to the calculated Instrument Detection Limits was observed to parallel ion population losses.  相似文献   

11.
A general approach for the detailed characterization of sodium borohydride-reduced peptidoglycan fragments (syn. muropeptides), produced by muramidase digestion of the purified sacculus isolated from Bacillus subtilis (vegetative cell form of the wild type and a dacA mutant) and Bacillus megaterium (endospore form), is outlined based on UV matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) and nano-electrospray ionization (nESI) quadrupole ion trap (QIT) mass spectrometry (MS). After enzymatic digestion and reduction of the resulting muropeptides, the complex glycopeptide mixture was separated and fractionated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Prior to mass spectrometric analysis, the muropeptide samples were subjected to a desalting step and an aliquot was taken for amino acid analysis. Initial molecular mass determination of these peptidoglycan fragments (ranging from monomeric to tetrameric muropeptides) was performed by positive and negative ion MALDI-MS using the thin-layer technique with the matrix alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid. The results demonstrated that for the fast molecular mass determination of large sample numbers in the 0.8-10 pmol range and with a mass accuracy of +/-0.07%, negative ion MALDI-MS in the linear TOF mode is the method of choice. After this kind of muropeptide screening often a detailed primary structural analysis is required owing to ambiguous data. Structural data could be obtained from peptidoglycan monomers by post-source decay (PSD) fragment ion analysis, but not from dimers or higher oligomers and not with the necessary sensitivity. Multistage collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments performed on an nESI-QIT instrument were found to be the superior method for structural characterization of not only monomeric but also of dimeric and trimeric muropeptides. Up to MS4 experiments were sometimes necessary to obtain unambiguous structural information. Three examples are presented: (a) CID MSn (n = 2-4) of a peptidoglycan monomer (disaccharide-tripeptide) isolated from B. subtilis (wild type, vegetative cell form), (b) CID MSn (n = 2-4) of a peptidoglycan dimer (bis-disaccharide-tetrapentapeptide) obtained from a B. subtilis mutant (vegetative cell form) and (c) CID MS2 of a peptidoglycan trimer (a linear hexasaccharide with two peptide side chains) isolated from the spore cortex of B. megaterium. All MS(n) experiments were performed on singly charged precursor ions and the MS2 spectra were dominated by fragments derived from interglycosidic bond cleavages. MS3 and MS4 spectra exhibited mainly peptide moiety fragment ions. In case of the bis-disaccharide-tetrapentapeptide, the peptide branching point could be determined based on MS3 and MS4 spectra. The results demonstrate the utility of nESI-QIT-MS towards the facile determination of the glycan sequence, the peptide linkage and the peptide sequence and branching of purified muropeptides (monomeric up to trimeric forms). The wealth of structural information generated by nESI-QIT-MSn is unsurpassed by any other individual technique.  相似文献   

12.
The use of a Q-q-Q(linear ion trap) instrument to obtain product ion spectra is described. The instrument is based on the ion path of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer with Q3 operable as either a conventional RF/DC quadrupole mass filter or a linear ion trap mass spectrometer with axial ion ejection. This unique ion optical arrangement allows de-coupling of precursor ion isolation and fragmentation from the ion trap itself. The result is a high sensitivity tandem mass spectrometer with triple quadrupole fragmentation patterns and no inherent low mass cut-off. The use of the entrance RF-only section of the instrument as accumulation ion trap while the linear ion trap mass spectrometer is scanning enhances duty cycles and results in increased sensitivities by as much as a factor of 20. The instrument is also capable of all of the triple quadrupole scans including multiple-reaction monitoring (MRM) as well as precursor and constant neutral loss scanning. The high product ion scanning sensitivity allows the recording of useful product ion spectra near the MRM limit of quantitation.  相似文献   

13.
Structural analyses of various glycans attached to proteins and peptides are highly desirable for elucidating their biological roles. An approach based on mass spectrometry (MS) combining both collision-induced dissociation (CID) and electron-capture dissociation (ECD) in the positive- and negative-ion modes has been proposed as a simple and direct method of assigning an O-glycan without releasing it from the peptide and of determining the amino acid sequence of the peptide and glycosylation site. The instrument used is an electrospray ionization (ESI) linear ion trap (LIT) time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer with tandem LITs for CID by He gas and ECD. The proposed approach was tested with two synthetic O-glycopeptides binding a sialyl Lewis x (sLe(x)) oligosaccharide and a 3'-sialyl N-acetyllactosamine (3'-SLN) on a serine (S) residue. In the negative-ion mode, the CID MS(2) spectra of O-glycopeptides showed a relatively abundant glycoside-bond cleavage between the core N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and serine (S) that yields deprotonated C(3)-type fragment ions of O-glycan and deprotonated Z(0)-type peptide ions. The structure of the sLe(x) (3'-SLN) oligosaccharide was simply assigned by comparing the CID MS(3) spectrum derived from the C(3)-type fragment ion with the CID MS(2) spectra of the sLe(x) and sLe(a) (3'- and 6'-SLN) standards (i.e., negative-ion MS(n) spectral matching). The amino acid sequence of the peptide including the glycosylation site was determined from the ECD MS(2) spectrum in the positive-ion mode.  相似文献   

14.
A triple-quadrupole instrument and a hybrid quadrupole/time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer were compared for the determination of pharmaceutical compounds in water samples. The drugs investigated were the analgesics Ibuprofen, Fenoprofen, Ketoprofen, Naproxen, and Diclofenac. The recently introduced Q2-pulsing function, which enhances the transmission of fragment ions of a selected m/z window from the collision cell into the TOF analyzer, improved the sensitivity of product ion scans on the quadrupole/TOF instrument. The selectivity is much better on quadrupole/TOF systems than on triple quadrupoles because the high resolving power of the reflectron-TOF mass analyzer permits high-accuracy fragment ion selection. This minimizes interferences from environmental matrices and allows acquisition of full spectra for selected analytes with better signal-to-noise characteristics than comparable spectra obtained with a scanned quadrupole. The qualitative information obtained (mass accuracy, resolution and full-scan spectra) by hybrid quadrupole/TOF mass spectrometry allows a more certain identification of analytes in environmental matrices at trace levels. Sample enrichment of water samples was achieved by a solid-phase extraction procedure. Average recoveries for loading 1 L of samples varied from 88 to 110%, and the quantification limits were less than 1.2 ng/L for the triple-quadrupole instrument (in MRM mode) and less than 3 ng/L for the quadrupole/TOF instrument.  相似文献   

15.
On-line analysis of compounds from solution has been greatly facilitated by the advent of electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). Although quadrupole mass analyzers are most commonly used with ESI at present, time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometers offer several potential advantages including high data acquisition rates, which are desirable for fast separation techniques. One method of coupling ESI and TOF uses an ion trap for temporary storage and accumulation of the electrosprayed ions prior to TOF mass analysis. Previous studies have not fully addressed the effects of several key variables on the analytical capabilities of this type of instrument. In this study, the characterization of an ion trap/linear TOF instrument for ESI is described. The behavior of various analytes is divided into two separate groups; each one is found to have its own optimal set of operating conditions. The reasons for the observed differences between groups are explored. Issues relevant to mass resolution, sensitivity, mass range, mass-to-charge ratio discrimination, and mass measurement accuracy are addressed. Finally, it is suggested that the analytical capability of this type of instrument could be significantly improved by changing the ion optics from the existing focusing lenses to a rf-only quadrupole lens.  相似文献   

16.
Broad-scale mass spectrometric analyses of glycopeptides are constrained by the considerable complexity inherent to glycoproteomics, and techniques are still being actively developed to address the associated analytical difficulties. Here we apply Orbitrap mass analysis and higher-energy C-trap dissociation (HCD) to facilitate detailed insights into the compositions and heterogeneity of complex mixtures of low abundance glycopeptides. By generating diagnostic oxonium product ions at mass measurement errors of <5 ppm, highly selective glycopeptide precursor ion detections are made at sub-fmol limits of detection: analyses of proteolytic digests of a hen egg glycoprotein mixture detect 88 previously uncharacterized glycopeptides from 666 precursor ions selected for MS/MS, with only one false positive due to co-fragmentation of a non-glycosylated peptide with a glycopeptide. We also demonstrate that by (1) identifying multiple series of glycoforms using high mass accuracy single stage MS spectra, and (2) performing product ion scans at optimized HCD collision energies, the identification of peptide + N-acetylhexosamine (HexNAc) ions (Y1 ions) can be readily achieved at <5 ppm mass measurement errors. These data allow base peptide sequences and glycan compositional information to be attained with high confidence, even for glycopeptides that produce weak precursor ion signals and/or low quality MS/MS spectra. The glycopeptides characterized from low fmol abundances using these methods allow two previously unreported glycosylation sites on the Gallus gallus protein ovoglycoprotein (amino acids 82 and 90) to be confirmed; considerable glycan heterogeneities at amino acid 90 of ovoglycoprotein, and amino acids 34 and 77 of Gallus gallus ovomucoid are also revealed.  相似文献   

17.
Doubly protonated peptides that undergo an electron transfer reaction without dissociation in a linear ion trap can be subjected to beam-type collisional activation upon transfer from the linear ion trap into an adjacent mass analyzer, as demonstrated here with a hybrid triple quadrupole/linear ion trap system. The activation can be promoted by use of a DC offset difference between the ion trap used for reaction and the ion trap into which the products are injected of 12-16 V, which gives rise to energetic collisions between the transferred ions and the collision/bath gas employed in the linear ion trap used for ion/ion reactions. Such a process can be executed routinely on hybrid linear ion trap/triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometers and is demonstrated here with several model peptides as well as a few dozen tryptic peptides. Collisional activation of the peptide precursor ions that survive electron transfer frequently provides structural information that is absent from the precursor ions that fragment spontaneously upon electron transfer. The degree to which additional structural information is obtained by collisional activation of the surviving singly charged peptide ions depends upon peptide size. Little or no additional structural information is obtained from small peptides (<8 residues) due to the high electron transfer dissociation (ETD) efficiencies noted for these peptides as well as the extensive sequence information that tends to be forthcoming from ETD of such species. Collisional activation of the surviving electron transfer products provided greatest benefit for peptides of 8-15 residues.  相似文献   

18.
Novel instrumentation has been developed which allows for the sequential injection and subsequent reaction of oppositely-charged ions generated via electrospray ionization (ESI) in a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. The instrument uses a DC turning quadrupole to sequentially direct the two ion polarities into the ion trap from ESI sources which are situated 90 degrees from the axial (z) dimension of the trap, and 180 degrees from one another. This arrangement significantly expands the range of ionic reactants amenable to study over previously-used instrumentation. For example, ion/ion reactions of multiply-charged positive ions with multiply-charged negative ions can be studied. Also, reactions of multiply-charged ions with singly-charged ions of opposite polarity that could not be generated by previously used ionization methods, or that could not be efficiently injected through the ion trap ring electrode, can be studied with the new instrument. This capability allows, for example, the charge state manipulation of negatively-charged precursor and product ions derived from proteins and oligonucleotides via proton transfer reactions with singly-charged cations generated by ESI.  相似文献   

19.
Multistage mass spectrometry, as implemented using low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID) analysis in three-dimensional (3D) quadrupole ion traps (QITs), has become a powerful tool for the investigation of protein glycosylation. In addition to the well-known combination of QITs with electrospray ionization (ESI), also a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization--quadrupole ion trap--reflectron time-of-flight (MALDI-QIT-rTOF) mass spectrometer has recently become available. This study systematically investigates the differences between these types of instrument, as applied to characterization of glycopeptides from human antithrombin. The glycopeptides were obtained by tryptic digestion followed by lectin-affinity purification. Some significant differences between the ESI-QIT and MALDI-QIT-rTOF approaches appeared, most of them are causally related to the desorption/ionization process. The combination of a vacuum MALDI source with an ion-trap analyzer accentuates some characteristic differences between MALDI and ESI due the longer time frame needed for the trapping process. In contrast to ESI, MALDI generated ions that exhibited considerable metastable fragmentation during trapping. The long time span of the QIT process (ms range) compared with that for conventional rTOF experiments (micros range) significantly magnified the extent of this metastable fragmentation. With the investigated glycopeptides, a complete depletion of the terminal sialic acids of the glycopeptides as well as a variety of other fragment ions was already found in the MS1 spectra from the MALDI-QIT-rTOF instrument. The positive ion low-energy CID spectra (MS2) of the selected glycopeptides obtained using the two different QIT equipped instruments were found to be quite similar. In both approaches, fragmentation of the glycan and peptide structures occurred sequentially, allowing unambiguous sequence determination. In the case of ESI-QIT-MS, fragmentation of the glycan structure occurred at the MS2 stage and fragmentation of the peptide structure was obtained only at the MS3 stage, which indicates the necessity of multistage CID experiments for complete structure elucidation. The MALDI-QIT-rTOF instrument yielded both kinds of fragments at the MS2 stage but without mutual interference.  相似文献   

20.
A novel method for separating ions according to their charge state using a quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer is presented. The benefits of charge state separation are particularly apparent in protein identification applications at low femtomole concentration levels, where in conventional TOF MS spectra peptide ions are often lost in a sea of chemical noise. When doubly and triply charged tryptic peptide ions need to be filtered from singly charged background ions, the latter are suppressed by two to three orders of magnitude, while from 10-50% of multiply charged ions remain. The suppression of chemical noise reduces the need for chromatography and can make this experimental approach the electrospray equivalent of conventional MALDI peptide maps. If unambiguous identification cannot be achieved, MS/MS experiments are performed on the precursor ions identified through charge separation, while the previously described Q2-trapping duty cycle enhancement is tuned for approximately 1.4 of the precursor m/z to enhance intensities of ions with m/z values above that of the precursor. The resulting product ion spectra contain few fragments of impurities and provide quick and unambiguous identification through database search. The multiple charge separation technique requires minimal tuning and may become a useful tool for analysis of complex mixtures.  相似文献   

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