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1.
Previously (Kostyukevich et al. Anal Chem 2014, 86, 2595), we have reported that oligosaccharides anions are produced in the electrospray in two different conformations, which differ by the rate of gas phase hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange reaction. In the present paper, we apply the in‐electrospray ionization (ESI) source H/D exchange approach for the investigation of the oligosaccharides cations formed by attaching of metal ions (Na, K) to the molecule. It was observed that the formation of different conformers can be manipulated by varying the temperature of the desolvating capillary of the ESI interphase. Separation of the conformers was performed using gas phase H/D approach. Because the conformers have different rates of the H/D exchange reaction, the deuterium distribution spectrum becomes bimodal. It was found that the conformation corresponding to the slow H/D exchange rate dominates in the spectrum when the capillary temperature is low (~200 °C), and the conformation corresponding to the fast H/D exchange rate dominates at high (~400 °C) temperatures. In the intermediate temperature region, two conformers are present simultaneously. It was also observed that large oligosaccharide requires higher temperature for the formation of another conformer. It was found that the presence of the conformers considerably depends on the solvent used for ESI and the pH. We have compared these results with the previously performed in‐ESI source H/D exchange experiments with peptides and proteins. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
In the paper, we have demonstrated the possibility of performing hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange of proteins in the region of gas‐phase ion formation in an electrospray ion source by saturating the electrospray ionization source with vapors of a deuterating agent (D2O or MeOD). In this region, charged droplets are shrinking and the protein ions transfer into the gas phase. As a model protein, we have used ubiquitin whose ion mobility spectrometry and gas‐phase H/D exchange in the vacuum part of a mass spectrometer demonstrated the presence of gas‐phase conformers with different cross sections and H/D exchange rates. In our experiments, we observed monomodal deuterium distributions for all solvents, charge states, desolvating capillary temperature and types of deuterating agent. Also, we found that the number of H/D exchanges increases with an increasing desolvating capillary temperature and decreasing charge state. We observed that solution composition (49 : 50 : 1 H2O : MeOH : formic acid or 99 : 1 H2O : formic acid) influences the charge‐state distribution but did not change the degree of H/D exchange for the same charge state. Electron‐capture dissociation fragmentation shows that higher charge states contain a segment that is protected from access by the deuterating agent. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
An electrospray ionization (ESI)/fast-flow technique has been applied to the study of gas phase hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange kinetics. Multiply charged ubiquitin ions [ubiquitin + nH](n)(+), in charge states n = 7-13, were reacted with ND(3). The behavior of ND(3) as exchange reagent is different from that of the previously studied reagents, D(2)O and CH(3)OD. Contrary to those, the maximum number of exchanged hydrogen atoms and the overall exchange rate were observed to increase with increasing charge state of the ubiquitin ions. The results are reagent-dependent because the exchange mechanisms are different for the different reagents. This observation is in agreement with a recent conclusion by Beauchamp and co-workers that contrary to the assumption often expressed in earlier studies, H/D exchange kinetics may not directly reflect ion structures. The results for all three reagents are, however, consistent with observations of previous ion mobility experiments that with increasing charge state the conformers change from more compact, partially folded structures to elongated nearly linear ones. H/D exchange of (ubiquitin + 13H)(13+) with ND(3) leads to two separated ion populations reflecting the possible existence of two conformers with different exchange rates. The ions (ubiquitin + 8H)(8+) and (ubiquitin + 11H)(11+) represent a partially folded structure and an unfolded structure, respectively, and were studied in greater detail. The relative abundances of ions were measured in steps of 0.5 m/z (mass-to-charge ratio), as a function of the ND(3) flow rate. The experimental results were simulated by computer fitted curves based on a recently developed algorithm. The algorithm allows the extraction of sets of grouped rate constants. Eight rate constant groups were deduced for each of the two ions. These rate constants correspond to 32 and 44 H/D exchanges for the 8+ and 11+ charged ions, respectively. The results indicate higher individual rates for most of the exchanged atoms in the 11+ ion compared to the 8+ ion.  相似文献   

4.
We present the application of the extended desolvating capillaries for increasing the degree of the gas‐phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange reaction at atmospheric pressure. The use of the extended capillaries results in the increase of the time that ions spend in the high pressure region, what leads to the significant improvement of the efficiency of the reaction. For the small protein ubiquitin, it was observed that for the same temperature, the number of exchanges increases with the decrease of the charge state so that the lowest charge state can exchange twice the number of hydrogen than the highest one. With the increase of the temperature, the difference decreases, and eventually, the number of exchanges equalizes for all charge states. The value of this temperature and the corresponding number of exchanges depend on the geometric parameters of the capillary. Further increase of the temperature leads to the thermal dissociation of the protein ion. The observed b/y fragments are identical to those produced by collision‐induced dissociation performed in the ion trap. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
The experimental investigation of site‐specific intra‐ionic hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange in the low‐energy collision‐induced dissociation (CID) product ion spectra of protonated small molecules generated by electrospray ionisation (ESI) is presented. The observation of intra‐ionic H/D exchange in such ions under low‐energy CID conditions has hitherto been rarely reported. The data suggest that the intra‐ionic H/D exchange takes place in a site‐specific manner between the ionising deuteron, localised at either a tertiary amine or a tertiary amine‐N‐oxide, and a γ‐hydrogen relative to the nitrogen atom. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy measurements showed that no H/D exchange takes place in solution, indicating that the reaction occurs in the gas phase. The compounds analysed in this study suggested that electron‐withdrawing groups bonded to the carbon atom bearing the γ‐hydrogen can preclude exchange. The effect of the electron‐withdrawing group appears dependent upon its electronegativity, with lower χ value groups still allowing exchange to take place. However, the limited dataset available in this study prevented robust conclusions being drawn regarding the effect of the electron‐withdrawing group. The observation of site‐specific intra‐ionic H/D exchange has application in the area of structural elucidation, where it could be used to introduce an isotopic label into the carbon skeleton of a molecule containing specific structural features. This could increase the throughput, and minimise the cost, of such studies due to the obviation of the need to produce a deuterium‐labelled analogue by synthetic means. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
MS/MS experiment and accurate mass measurement are powerful tools in metabolite identification. However, sometimes these data do not provide enough information to assign an unambiguous structure to a metabolite. In combination with MS techniques, hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange can provide additional information for structural elucidation by determination of the number of exchangeable hydrogen atoms in a structure. In this study, the principal phase I metabolites of iso‐phenylcyclopentylamine in rat bile were identified by high‐performance liquid chromatography with electrospray ionization quadrupole time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry (ESI‐Q‐TOF‐MS). Since N‐oxidation may occur because of the existence of the primary amino group in the structure, it was difficult to differentiate the hydroxylated metabolites from N‐oxides by ESI‐Q‐TOF‐MS alone. Therefore, online H/D exchange technique was applied to solve this problem. Finally, 25 phase I metabolites were detected and structurally described, in which 11 were confirmed to be N‐oxides. This study demonstrated the effectiveness of high‐resolution mass spectrometry in combination with an online H/D exchange technique in rapid identification of drug metabolites, especially in discriminating hydroxylated metabolites from N‐oxides. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
The hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange of protonated and alkali-metal cationized Arg-Gly and Gly-Arg peptides with D(2)O in the gas phase was studied using electrospray ionization quadropole ion trap mass spectrometry. The Arg-Gly and Gly-Arg alkali metal complexes exchange significantly more hydrogens than protonated Arg-Gly and Gly-Arg. We propose a mechanism where the peptide shifts between a zwitterionic salt bridge and nonzwitterionic charge solvated conformations. The increased rate of H/D exchange of the alkali metal complexes is attributed to the peptide metal complexes' small energy difference between the salt-bridge conformation and the nonzwitterionic charge-solvated conformation. Implications for the applicability of this mechanism to other zwitterionic systems are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The measurement of deuterium incorporation kinetics using hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange experiments is a valuable tool for the investigation of the conformational dynamics of biomolecules in solution. Experiments consist of two parts when using H/D exchange mass spectrometry to analyse the deuterium incorporation. After deuterium incorporation at high D(2)O concentration, it is necessary to decrease the D(2)O concentration before the mass analysis to avoid deuterium incorporation under artificial conditions of mass spectrometric preparation and measurement. A low D(2)O concentration, however, leads to back-exchange of incorporated deuterons during mass analysis. This back-exchange is one of the major problems in H/D exchange mass spectrometry and must be reduced as much as possible. In the past, techniques using electrospray ionization (ESI) had the lowest back-exchange values possible in H/D exchange mass spectrometry. Methods for the measurement of H/D exchange by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) that have been developed since 1998 have some significant advantages, but they could not achieve the back-exchange minima of ESI methods. Here, we present a protocol for H/D exchange MALDI-MS which allows for greater minimization of back-exchange compared with H/D exchange ESI-MS under similar conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Amide hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange coupled with proteolysis, high-perfeomance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) separation and mass spectrometry (MS) has become a powerful tool to study protein dynamics in solution. Prior to the execution of H/D exchange experiments, various experimental parameters have to be set, including proteolysis, HPLC, and MS conditions. Here we investigate the effects of electrospray capillary temperature on deuterium retention in backbone amides of various pepsin-generated cytochrome c peptides. Lower capillary temperature generally helps retain more deuterium than higher capillary temperature. When the capillary temperature was 150 degrees C, on average 26% more deuterium was retained than when the capillary temperature was set at 250 degrees C. The effects of capillary temperature varied depending on the ions monitored. There was little difference in deuterium retention among different charge state species of the same peptide at 150 degrees C. However, a lower charge state ion loses more deuterium atoms going from 150 degrees C to 250 degrees C than the corresponding higher charge state species. These results indicate that the capillary temperature should be optimized not only to maximize the signal-to-noise of each ion followed in H/D exchange experiments, but also to minimize the deuterium loss of the ions. Also the loss of deuterium in several ions, especially lower charge state ones, should be monitored in the optimization, as the temperature effects vary among ions and are more significant for lower charge state ions.  相似文献   

10.
A new method is described for performing hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange in an electrospray ionization (ESI) source. The use of liquid chromatography (LC)-mass spectrometer equipped with an ESI source and deuterium oxide (D2O) as the sheath liquid allows H/D exchange experiments to be performed on-line. This directly provides information for determining the number and position of exchangeable hydrogens, aiding in the elucidation of the structures of drug metabolites. To demonstrate the utility of this method, LC-mass spectrometry (MS) and LC-MS/MS experiments were performed using either H2O or D2O as sheath liquid on a matrix metalloprotease (MMP) inhibitor (PD 0200126) and its metabolites. Examination of the mass shift of the deuteriated molecule from that of the protonated molecule allowed the number of exchangeable protons to be determined. Interpretation of the production-spectra helped to determine the location of the exchanged protons and assisted in the assignment of the site(s) of modification for each metabolite.  相似文献   

11.
A novel ion/molecule reaction was observed to occur under electrospray ionization (ESI), atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI), and atmospheric pressure photo ionization (APPI) conditions, leading to dimerization of ionized 4‐(methyl mercapto)‐phenol followed by fast H· loss. The reaction is particularly favored during ESI, which suggests that this ion/molecule reaction can occur both in the solution inside the ESI‐charged droplets and in the gas‐phase environment of most other atmospheric pressure ionization techniques. The dimerization reaction is inherent to the electrolytic process during ESI, whereas it is more by ion/molecule chemistry in nature during APCI and APPI. From the tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) data, accurate mass measurements, hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange experiments and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, two methyl sulfonium ions appear to be the most likely products of this electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction. The possible occurrence of this unexpected reaction complicates mass spectral data interpretation and can be misleading in terms of structural assignment as reported herein for 4‐(methyl mercapto)‐phenol. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
Gas-phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange of six deprotonated dinucleotides with CD(3)OD was performed in the second hexapole of a Fourier transform ion-cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer. To complete these experiments, dynamic simulations were carried out to investigate the different conformations adopted by the dinucleotides. In the experimental conditions and in integrating the experimental and theoretical results, H/D exchange was shown to be controlled by hydrogen accessibility and not by the chemical nature of the heteroatom bearing the exchangeable hydrogen. A model including simultaneous H/D exchanges at the experimental time scale was used to reproduce the dinucleotide H/D exchange kinetic plots. The relay mechanism was not relevant for dinucleotides. This allowed the H/D exchange rates to be directly linked to conformations.  相似文献   

13.
In-source 'on-the-fly' hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS) has been investigated. The work was performed using a dual-sprayer source. The analyte was introduced through an electrospray ionisation sprayer and D2O was introduced through an atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation sprayer. To achieve H/D exchange sufficient to determine the number of exchangeable H atoms of a compound, a saturated 'steady-state' D2O atmosphere had to be created in the ion source by having a 2:1 or higher D2O-to-analyte flow rate ratio. Under these conditions H/D exchange levels of 32-90% were achieved. In most cases the H/D exchange was sufficient to measure the number of exchangeable H atoms in some antiulcerative and anthelmintic pharmaceuticals. The concept of in-source 'on-the-fly' H/D exchange by introducing the deuterating agent via a second sprayer has been shown. It allows the integrity of the chromatographic separation to be kept, since the H/D exchange takes place post-separation.  相似文献   

14.
Mass analysis of proteolytic fragment peptides following hydrogen/deuterium exchange offers a general measure of solvent accessibility/hydrogen bonding (and thus conformation) of solution-phase proteins and their complexes. The primary problem in such mass analyses is reliable and rapid assignment of mass spectral peaks to the correct charge state and degree of deuteration of each fragment peptide, in the presence of substantial overlap between isotopic distributions of target peptides, autolysis products, and other interferant species. Here, we show that at sufficiently high mass resolving power (m/Δm50% ≥ 100,000), it becomes possible to resolve enough of those overlaps so that automated data reduction becomes possible, based on the actual elemental composition of each peptide without the need to deconvolve isotopic distributions. We demonstrate automated, rapid, reliable assignment of peptide masses from H/D exchange experiments, based on electrospray ionization FT-ICR mass spectra from H/D exchange of solution-phase myoglobin. Combined with previously demonstrated automated data acquisition for such experiments, the present data reduction algorithm enhances automation (and thus expands generality and applicability) for high-resolution mass spectrometry-based analysis of H/D exchange of solution-phase proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Amide hydrogen exchange coupled to nano‐electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (nano‐ESI‐MS) has been used to identify and characterize localized conformational changes of Akt upon activation. Active or inactive Akt was incubated in D2O buffer, digested with pepsin, and analyzed by nano‐ESI‐MS to determine the deuterium incorporation. The hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange profiles revealed that Akt undergoes considerable conformational changes in the core structures of all three individual domains after activation. In the PH domain, four β‐strand (β1, β2 β5 and β6) regions containing membrane‐binding residues displayed higher solvent accessibility in the inactive state, suggesting that the PH domain is readily available for the binding to the plasma membrane for activation. In contrast, these β‐strands became less exposed or more folded in the active form, which is favored for the dissociation of Akt from the membrane. The beginning α‐helix J region and the C‐terminal locus (T450‐470P) of the regulatory domain showed less folded structures that probably enable substrate entry. Our data also revealed detailed conformational changes of Akt in the kinase domain due to activation, some of which may be attributed to the interaction of the basic residues with phosphorylation sites. Our H/D exchange results indicating the conformational status of Akt at different activation states provided new insight for the regulation of this critical protein involved in cell survival. Published in 2009 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
The interfacing of capillary electrophoresis (CE) with mass spectrometry (MS) is well established and may be accomplished by use of either a coaxial arrangement or by employing a liquid T-junction. In both these interfaces a make-up flow is introduced. This is required because of the mismatch in flow rates for capillary electrophoresis approximately nL/min and 'true' electrospray approximately 2-10 microL/min. Electrical connectivity may also be established where the liquid flows meet (the introduction of nanospray renders the use of make-up flow unnecessary). Hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange occurs in solution when there are labile hydrogen atoms present in a molecule. The establishment of the presence and the number of such exchangeable hydrogen atoms may be of importance in the identification and differentiation of compounds. It may also be an aid in the structural elucidation of unknown materials. We have investigated the feasibility of carrying out H/D exchange via a CE/MS interface. This involved the addition of D2O to the sheath flow and our preliminary results showing the separations of drug substances, subsequently undergoing exchange, are presented.  相似文献   

17.
Mass spectrometry (MS) plays a central role in studies on protein structure and dynamics. This review highlights some of the recent developments in this area, with focus on applications involving the use of electrospray ionization (ESI) MS. Although this technique involves the transformation of analytes into highly nonphysiological species (desolvated gas-phase ions in the vacuum), ESI-MS can provide detailed insights into the solution-phase behavior of proteins. Notably, the ionization process itself occurs in a structurally sensitive manner. An increased degree of solution-phase unfolding is correlated with a higher level of protonation. Also, ESI allows the transfer of intact noncovalent complexes into the gas phase, thereby yielding information on binding partners, stoichiometries, and even affinities. A particular focus of this article is the use of hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX) methods and hydroxyl radical (.OH) labeling for monitoring dynamic and structural aspect of solution-phase proteins. Conceptual similarities and differences between the two methods are discussed. We describe a simple method for the computational simulation of protein HDX patterns, a tool that can be helpful for the interpretation of isotope exchange data recorded under mixed EX1/EX2 conditions. Important aspects of .OH labeling include a striking dependence on protein concentration, and the tendency of commonly used solvent additives to act as highly effective radical scavengers. If not properly controlled, both of these factors may lead to experimental artifacts.  相似文献   

18.
Azaphilones represent numerous groups of wild fungal secondary metabolites that exhibit exceptional tendency to bind to nitrogen atoms in various molecules, especially those containing the amine group. Nitrogenized analogues of mitorubrin azaphilones, natural secondary metabolites of Hypoxylon fragiforme fungus, have been detected in the fungal methanol extract in very low concentrations. Positive electrospray ionization interfaced with high‐resolution mass spectrometry was applied for confirmation of the elemental composition of protonated species. Collision‐induced dissociation (CID) experiments have been performed, and fragmentation mechanisms have been proposed. Additional information regarding both secondary metabolite analogue families has been reached by application of gas‐phase proton/deuterium (H/D) exchanges performed in the collision cell of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. An incomplete H/D exchange with one proton less than expected was observed for both protonated mitorubrin azaphilones and their nitrogenized analogues. By means of the density functional theory, an appropriate explanation of this behavior was provided, and it revealed some information concerning gas‐phase H/D exchange mechanism and protonation sites. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
Ginkgolic acids have been shown to possess allergenic as well as genotoxic and cytotoxic properties. The question arises whether the metabolism of ginkgolic acids in the liver could decrease or increase their toxicity. In this study, the in vitro metabolism of ginkgolic acid (15:1, GA), one component of ginkgo acids, was investigated as a model compound in Sprague‐Dawley rat liver microsomes. The metabolites were analyzed by ultra‐performance liquid chromatography coupled with photodiode array detector/negative‐ion electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC‐PDA/ESI‐MS/MS) and hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange. The result showed that the benzene ring remained unchanged and the oxidations occurred at the side alkyl chain in rat liver microsomes. At least eight metabolites were found. Among them, six phase I metabolites were tentatively identified. This study might be useful for the investigation of toxicological mechanism of ginkgolic acids. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
At present, the secondary structure of oligonucleotide ions in a gas phase is almost not understood. One of the main points is the retention of a hairpin secondary structure during ionization. In this work, we used a deuterium–hydrogen exchange reaction in a gas phase at atmospheric pressure for studying the conformational dynamics of oligonucleotide ions formed as a result of electrospray ionization. The exchange reactions of two oligonucleotides, which consisted of the identical sets of nucleotides but differed in their sequence, have been studied. One of these oligonucleotides formed a hairpin secondary structure, but the other did not. It has been found that both of the oligonucleotides demonstrate similar reaction dynamics of deuterium/hydrogen exchange in the gas phase; thereby indicating that the secondary structure has been completely destroyed during ionization.  相似文献   

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