Utility of reaction intermediate monitoring with photodissociation multi-stage (MS) time-of-flight mass spectrometry for mechanistic and structural studies: Phosphopeptides |
| |
Authors: | Jeong Hee Moon Young Sik Shin Myung Soo Kim |
| |
Affiliation: | aMedical Proteomics Research Center, KRIBB, Daejeon 305-806, Republic of Korea;bDepartment of Chemistry, Seoul National University, San 56-1, Sillim-dong Gwanak-gu, Seoul 151-742, Republic of Korea |
| |
Abstract: | In tandem mass spectra of phosphopeptides, intact sequence ions are often missing or appear weakly. Instead, dephosphorylated sequence ions appear prominently. In this work, we used photodissociation (PD) multi-stage (MSn) time-of-flight mass spectrometry that can monitor reaction intermediates with lifetime as short as 100 ns to study the formation of dephosphorylated sequence ions such as yn-H3PO4. yn-H3PO4 was found to be formed mainly by H3PO4 loss from yn. For doubly phosphorylated peptides, yn seemed to lose H3PO4 stepwise and form yn-H3PO4 and yn-2H3PO4. Even when yn was absent in PD-MS2 spectrum, its m/z could be predicted from those of yn-H3PO4 and/or yn-2H3PO4. Complete sequence coverage was possible when the data from PD-MS2 and PD-MS3 were combined, demonstrating the utility of transient ion detection by PD-MS3 for structure analysis. |
| |
Keywords: | Reaction intermediate monitoring Photodissociation MSn Phosphopeptide |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|