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1.
On-line immobilized metal affinity chromatography/capillary electrophoresis/electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (IMAC/CE/ESI-MS) offers selective preconcentration of phosphorylated peptides with identification of the phosphorylated amino acid(s). The preconcentration provides low concentration limits of detection and capillary electrophoresis separates the peptides. Recently, we reported a fast, simple, and sensitive on-line IMAC/CE/ESI-MS/MS method for the determination of phosphopeptides at low-pmole levels. That work is expanded here by use of multiple stage tandem mass spectrometry (MS(n), n = 2,3) to isolate and fragment target ions to provide more reliable assignments of phosphorylated residues. The application of IMAC/CE/ESI-MS(n) is demonstrated by the analysis of tryptic digests of alpha- and beta-casein and in-gel tryptic digests of beta-casein.  相似文献   

2.
Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI/MS) affords a rapid and sensitive technique for determining peptides produced by the enzymatic digestion of phosphoroteins. When coupled with on-line immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography (IMAC), the combmation allows separation and mass spectrometric identification of phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated peptides. In this study, the feasibility and general applicability of on-line IMAC/ESI/MS is investigated by using immobilized ferric ions for selective chelation of several phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine peptides. The sensitivity and practicality of the technique for phosphoproteins are demonstrated via the analysis of 30 pmol (~0.7 μg) of bovine β-casein purified by sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, electroblotted onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and digested in situ with trypsin. It is observed that on-line IMAC/ESI/MS suffers less from sample losses than experiments performed off-line, suggesting that the limiting factors in sensitivity for this technique are the purification procedures and sample handling rather than the IMAC and mass spectrometry. Thus, the ability to inject the tryptic digest of an electroblotted protein directly onto the column without buffer exchange and to analyze the eluent directly via on-line coupling of the IMAC column to the mass spectrometer greatly reduces sample losses incurred through sample handling and provides a convenient method for analyzing phosphopeptides at low levels.  相似文献   

3.
A novel immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC)-based protocol was successfully used for sample preparation prior to nanoelectrospray-based sequencing of phosphopeptides. In a first step, phosphorylated peptides are detected in an unseparated peptide mixture using precursor ion scanning in the negative ion mode on a triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer. Then the phosphorylated peptides are enriched by passing the sample over an IMAC column and sequenced in the positive ion mode. The IMAC-based enrichment allows the sequencing of phosphorylated peptides even if other, much more abundant, peptides are present at the same m/z value in the original mixture. Using this two-step approach, we are able to combine the simplicity, sensitivity and specificity of precursor ion scanning-based detection of phosphopeptides using the nanoelectrospray ion source with the ability to sequence phosphorylated peptides even if they are present in substoichiometric amounts.  相似文献   

4.
The enrichment of phosphopeptides using immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) and subsequent mass spectrometric analysis is a powerful protocol for detecting phosphopeptides and analyzing their phosphorylation state. However, nonspecific binding peptides, such as acidic, nonphosphorylated peptides, often coelute and make analyses of mass spectra difficult. This study used a partial chemical tagging reaction of a phosphopeptide mixture, enriched by IMAC and contaminated with nonspecific binding peptides, following a modified beta-elimination/Michael addition method, and dynamic mass analysis of the resulting peptide pool. Mercaptoethanol was used as a chemical tag and nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) immobilized on Sepharose beads was used for IMAC enrichment. The time-dependent dynamic mass analysis of the partially tagged reaction mixture detected intact phosphopeptides and their mercaptoethanol-tagged derivatives simultaneously by their mass difference (-20 Da for each phosphorylation site). The number of new peaks appearing with the mass shift gave the number of multiply phosphorylated sites in a phosphopeptide. Therefore, this partial chemical tagging/dynamic mass analysis method can be a powerful tool for rapid and efficient phosphopeptide identification and analysis of the phosphorylation state concurrently using only MS analysis data.  相似文献   

5.
Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is widely used for protein separation and it is frequently the final step in protein purification in biochemistry and proteomics. Using a commercially available amine-reactive isobaric tagging reagent (iTRAQ) and mass spectrometry we obtained reproducible, quantitative data from peptides derived by tryptic in-gel digestion of proteins and phosphoproteins. The protocol combines optimized reaction conditions, miniaturized peptide handling techniques and tandem mass spectrometry to quantify low- to sub-picomole amounts of (phospho)proteins that were isolated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Immobilized metal affinity chromatography (FeIII-IMAC) was efficient for removal of excess reagents and for enrichment of derivatized phosphopeptides prior to matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) analysis. Phosphopeptide abundance was determined by liquid chromatography/tandem mass (LC/MS/MS) using either MALDI time-of-flight/time-of-flight (TOF/TOF) MS/MS or electrospray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight (ESI-QTOF) MS/MS instruments. Chemically labeled isobaric phosphopeptides, differing only by the position of the phosphate group, were distinguished and characterized by LC/MS/MS based on their LC elution profile and distinct MS/MS spectra. We expect this quantitative mass spectrometry method to be suitable for systematic, comparative analysis of molecular variants of proteins isolated by gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

6.
Zhou H  Tian R  Ye M  Xu S  Feng S  Pan C  Jiang X  Li X  Zou H 《Electrophoresis》2007,28(13):2201-2215
Large-scale characterization of phosphoproteins requires highly specific methods for the purification of phosphopeptides because of the low abundance of phosphoproteins and substoichiometry of phosphorylation. A phosphopeptide enrichment method using ZrO2 nanoparticles is presented. The high specificity of this approach was demonstrated by the isolation of phosphopeptides from the digests of model phosphoproteins. The strong affinity of ZrO2 nanoparticles to phosphopeptides enables the specific enrichment of phosphopeptides from a complex peptide mixture in which the abundance of phosphopeptides is two orders of magnitude lower than that of nonphosphopeptides. Superior selectivity of ZrO2 nanoparticles for the enrichment of phosphorylated peptides than that of conventional immobilized metal affinity chromatography was observed. Femtomole phosphopeptides from digestion products could be enriched by ZrO2 nanoparticles and can be well detected by MALDI mass spectrometric analysis. ZrO2 nanoparticles were further applied to selectively isolate phosphopeptides from the tryptic digestion of mouse liver lysate for phosphoproteome analysis by nanoliter LC MS/MS (nano-LC-MS/MS) and MS/MS/MS. A total of 248 defining phosphorylation sites and 140 phosphorylated peptides were identified by manual validation using a series of rigid criteria.  相似文献   

7.
Hsu JL  Chou MK  Liang SS  Huang SY  Wu CJ  Shi FK  Chen SH 《Electrophoresis》2004,25(21-22):3840-3847
We demonstrate a novel method for the fabrication of disposable plastic microtips, which we name "EasyTip", by a photopolymerization technique. C18 reversed-phase (C18) and ion metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) beads were immobilized on a plastic pipette tip, made of polypropylene materials, by photo-initiated polymerization. The fabricated EasyTips can be manipulated using commercial pipettes for wash/elution of minute amount of biological samples (< 10 microL) and can be applied for mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomic analysis, in which the detection sensitivity depends critically on the optimal sample preparation. The recovery of a sample of 25 fmol of tryptic hemoglobin digest loaded in a C18 EasyTip was near 100% and we estimated the loading capacity to be around 0.4-2.0 microg of total proteins or peptides, which is well above a sufficient quantity for MS analysis. The effectiveness of the C18 EasyTips in enhancing the detection sensitivity of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)-MS signal, and thus providing a greater sequence coverage, was also demonstrated by the analysis of hemoglobin digest and the in-gel digested epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) protein from A431 cell lysate. We also demonstrated the usefulness of the immobilized IMAC EasyTips in extracting the signal of tryptic phosphopeptides of beta-casein (10 pmol) having one and four phosphorylation sites by using an IMAC EasyTip prior to off-line analysis by MS. The combination of IMAC EasyTips and MALDI-MS allowed the unambiguous identification of phosphopeptides based on the phosphatase assay as well as the post-source decay. Compared to other miniaturized devices, this fabrication method is simple, cheap, and requires less human intervention. Moreover, the method of manipulating the EasyTips is straightforward and can be automated readily by a robotic system for high-throughput analysis.  相似文献   

8.
Titanium dioxide metal oxide affinity chromatography (TiO2‐MOAC) is widely regarded as being more selective than immobilized metal‐ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) for phosphopeptide enrichment. However, the widespread application of TiO2‐MOAC to biological samples is hampered by conflicting reports as to which experimental conditions are optimal. We have evaluated the performance of TiO2‐MOAC under a wide range of loading and elution conditions. Loading and stringent washing of peptides with strongly acidic solutions ensured highly selective enrichment for phosphopeptides, with minimal carryover of non‐phosphorylated peptides. Contrary to previous reports, the addition of glycolic acid to the loading solution was found to reduce specificity towards phosphopeptides. Base elution in ammonium hydroxide or ammonium phosphate provided optimal specificity and recovery of phosphorylated peptides. In contrast, elution with phosphoric acid gave incomplete recovery of phosphopeptides, whereas inclusion of 2,5‐dihydroxybenzoic acid in the eluant introduced a bias against the recovery of multiply phosphorylated peptides. TiO2‐MOAC was also found to be intolerant of many reagents commonly used as phosphatase inhibitors during protein purification. However, TiO2‐MOAC showed higher specificity than immobilized gallium (Ga3+), immobilized iron (Fe3+), or zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) affinity chromatography for phosphopeptide enrichment. Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI‐MS) was more effective in detecting larger, multiply phosphorylated peptides than liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC/ESI‐MS/MS), which was more efficient for smaller, singly phosphorylated peptides. Copyright © 2009 Crown in the right of Canada. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
Pelzing M  Neusüss C 《Electrophoresis》2005,26(14):2717-2728
Liquid chromatography (LC) nanoelectrospray-tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is a key technology for the study of proteomics, with the main benefit to the characterization of sensitive peptides from complex mixtures. Capillary electrophoresis coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) has been taken into consideration sporadically due to the highly efficient separation and ability to handle low sample amount, yet classified as being less sensitive with respect to analyte concentration. The limitation in capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) injection volumes can be overcome by on-line solid-phase extraction (SPE). Such an on-line SPE-CZE system was explored in combination with an ion trap (IT) mass spectrometer. Thus, it was possible to inject more than 100 microL sample solution on to the CZE capillary. Concentration limits of detection as low as 100 amol/microL were demonstrated for a peptide standard. This SPE-CZE-microelectrospray ionization (ESI)-MS/MS setup was compared directly to nanoLC/nanoESI using the same sample of a tryptic digest of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a reference standard. Measurements were made on one IT mass spectrometer with identical acquisition parameters. Both chromatography systems enabled the separation and detection of low levels of peptides from a mixture of moderate complexity, with most peptides identified using both techniques; however, specific differences were obvious. The nanoLC-MS is about five times more sensitive than the CZE-MS, yet the difference was less pronounced than expected. The CZE-MS technique showed reduced loss of peptides, especially for larger peptides (missed cleavages) and is about four times faster than the nanoLC-MS approach.  相似文献   

10.
We have developed a novel strategy to improve the efficiency of identification of multiply phosphorylated peptides isolated by hydroxy acid modified metal oxide chromatography (HAMMOC). This strategy consists of alkali‐induced chemical dephosphorylation (beta‐elimination reaction) of phosphopeptides isolated by HAMMOC prior to analysis by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS). This approach identified 1.9‐fold more multiply phosphorylated peptides than the conventional approach without beta‐elimination from a digested mixture of three standard phosphoproteins. In addition, the accuracy of phosphorylation site determination in synthetic phosphopeptides was significantly improved. Finally, we applied this approach to a cell lysate. By combining this dephosphorylation approach with the conventional approach, we successfully identified 1649 unique phosphopeptides, including 325 multiply phosphorylated phosphopeptides, from 200 µg of cultured Arabidopsis cells. These results indicate that chemical dephosphorylation prior to LC/MS analysis increases the efficiency of identification of multiply phosphorylated peptides, as well as the accuracy of phosphorylation site determination. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Phosphorylation of proteins is an important cellular regulatory process. The analysis of protein phosphorylation is challenging due to the high dynamic range and low abundance natures of phosphorylated species. Mass spectrometry (MS) of phosphopeptides obtained from tryptic protein digests is the method-of-choice for characterization of phosphorylated proteins. However, determination of phosphopeptides by MS represents a major challenge, especially in the presence of unmodified peptides. Due to lower ionization efficiency of phosphopeptides, as well as the fact that the stoichiometry of phosphorylation is often present at low relative abundance, efficient enrichment of the phosphorylated peptides prior to MS analysis is therefore of high demand. In addition, successful identification of peptides with different phosphorylation grades still remains challenging.  相似文献   

12.
Several affinity resins consisting of ionic metals or metal oxides were investigated for their phosphopeptide enrichment capabilities with subsequent mass spectrometric analyses. Commercially-available enrichment metal oxide affinity chromatography (MOAC) resins using manufacturer’s and/or published protocols were compared and evaluated for the most efficient and selective method that could be implemented as a standard enrichment procedure. From these comparative analyses, using a tryptic digest of casein proteins, it was determined that in our hands, two of the resins out-performed the others based on a variety of criteria, including the number of phosphorylation sites identified during MS analyses, the lower numbers of nonspecifically bound peptides observed, and the limits of detection. Applicability of these enrichment resins to a complex biological mixture was investigated. For this work, a mixture of avian histones was digested, subjected to titanium dioxide phosphopeptide enrichment, and analyzed by mass spectrometry. Eight phosphorylated tryptic peptides were observed following enrichment and subsequent LC/MS/MS analyses. Of note, seven of the eight phosphopeptides were not observed without titanium dioxide enrichment. From these analyses, four sites of phosphorylation were unequivocally determined, two of which have not been reported previously. Four additional phosphopeptides were observed; however, the site of phosphorylation could not be distinguished but was localized to one of two possible amino acids. These methods should aid in the investigation of proteins post-translationally modified with phosphate, especially those present at low concentrations as was demonstrated by successful enrichment at the femtomole level.  相似文献   

13.
The highly selective capture of phosphopeptides from proteolytic digests is a great challenge for the identification of phosphoproteins by mass spectrometry. In this work, the zirconium phosphonate-modified magnetic Fe3O4/SiO2 core/shell nanoparticles have been synthesized and successfully applied for the selective capture of phosphopeptides from complex tryptic digests of proteins before the analysis of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry with the desired convenience of sample handling. The ratio of magnetic nanoparticle to protein and the incubation time for capturing phosphopeptides from complex proteolytic digests were investigated, and the optimized nanoparticle-to-protein ratio and incubation time were between 15:1 to 30:1 and 30 min, respectively. The excellent detection limit of 0.5 fmol β-casein has been achieved by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry with the specific capture of zirconium phosphonate-modified magnetic Fe3O4 nanoparticles. The great specificity of zirconium phosphonate-modified magnetic Fe3O4 nanoparticles to phosphopeptides was demonstrated by the selective capture of phosphopeptides from a complex tryptic digest of the mixture of α-casein and bovine serum albumin at molar ratio of 1 to 100 in MALDI-TOF-MS analysis. An application of the magnetic nanoparticles to selective capture phosphopeptides from a tryptic digest of mouse liver lysate was further carried out by combining with nano-LC-MS/MS and MS/MS/MS analyses, and a total of 194 unique phosphopeptides were successfully identified.  相似文献   

14.
Protein phosphorylation is one of the most important post-translational modifications (PTM), however, the detection of phosphorylation in proteins using mass spectrometry (MS) remains challenging. This is because many phosphorylated proteins are only present in low abundance, and the ionization of the phosphorylated components in MS is very inefficient compared to the non-phosphorylated counterparts. Recently, we have reported a selective injection technique that can separate phosphopeptides from non-phosphorylated peptides due to the differences in their isoelectric points (pI) [1]. Phosphorylated peptides from α-casein were clearly observed at low femtomole level using MALDI MS. In this work, further developments on selective injection of phosphopeptides are presented to enhance its capability in handling higher sample complexity. The approach is to integrate selective injection with a sample stacking technique used in capillary electrophoresis to enrich the sample concentration, followed by electrophoresis to fractionate the components in preparation for MALDI MS analysis. The effectiveness of the selective injection and stacking was evaluated quantitatively using a synthetic phosphopeptide as sample, with an enrichment factor of up to 600 being recorded. Next, a tryptic digest of α-casein was used to evaluate the separation and fractionation of peptides for MALDI MS analysis. The elution order of phosphopeptides essentially followed the order of decreasing number of phosphates on the peptides. Finally, to illustrate the applicability, the integrated procedure was applied to evaluate the phosphorylation of a highly phosphorylated protein, osteopontin. Up to 41 phosphopeptides were observed, which allowed us to examine the phosphorylation of all 29 possible sites previously reported [2]. A high level of heterogeneity in the phosphorylation of OPN was evident by the multiple-forms of variable phosphorylation detected for a large number of peptides.  相似文献   

15.
Silica particles of different porosity were functionalised with iminodiacetic acid (IDA) and loaded with Fe(III) to yield immobilised metal affinity chromatography stationary phases (Fe(III)-IDA-silica) for phosphopeptide enrichment. The elution step of bound phosphopeptides was optimised with a 32P radioactive labelled peptide by a comprehensive study. Several elution systems, including phosphate buffers of different pH and concentration and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid solutions were employed. Furthermore the effect of support porosity on elution behaviour was investigated. Under best conditions recoveries higher than 90% were achieved. A solid-phase extraction (SPE) protocol was developed for fractionation of phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated peptides and desalting of the fractions which is essential for subsequent mass spectrometric analysis by the combination of Fe(III)-IDA-silica and C18-silica particles. The pH of the loading buffer was found to be a critical parameter for the efficiency of the SPE protocol. As tryptic digests of alpha-lactalbumin, lysozyme and ribonuclease A mixed with three synthetic phosphopeptides were fractionated, pH 2.5 provided minimal proportion of unspecific bound peptides when comparing the fractions after mu-LC-electrospray ionization MS separation. The effect of a sample derivatisation reaction (methylation) on the efficiency of phosphopeptide enrichment was further investigated. Blocking carboxylate groups by methyl ester formation totally prevented unspecific interaction with the immobilised Fe(III) ions, but generated partially methylated phosphopeptides that increased the complexity of the phosphorylated fraction.  相似文献   

16.
In this study, a new strategy named two‐step IMAC is demonstrated as a novel prelude to MS analysis of phosphoproteome by increasing the enrichment factor of phosphoproteins/phosphopeptides from a protein mixture. In this method, the first IMAC was performed at the protein level to extract the minute amount of phosphoproteins present in the sample. During this step, nonphosphoproteins and other undesired chemicals or inhibitors were excluded. After tryptic digestion, the second IMAC was performed at the peptide level to enrich phosphopeptides present in the tryptic digest, and the eluent from the second IMAC was analyzed by MALDI‐MS. It is particularly noticeable that the eluent from the first IMAC can be directly digested by trypsin without buffer exchange. Our results revealed that β‐casein that was spiked in a protein mixture can be successfully extracted by the first IMAC at a concentration of less than 1–3%, and the two phosphopeptides of β‐casein with single and four phosphorylation sites, respectively, can be captured by the second IMAC. It was found that the two‐step IMAC method could significantly reduce non‐specific bindings from unwanted proteins and greatly enhance the MALDI‐MS signal of phosphopeptide ions compared to the typical one‐step IMAC, by which only IMAC at the peptide level was performed. Two‐step IMAC was also found to tolerate a greater amount and a greater concentration range of proteins than one‐step IMAC, which is especially important when analyzing complicated unknown samples. Furthermore, the MS signal of phosphopeptide ions did not appear to be degraded by the presence of biological matrixes, such as the cell lysate in which the β‐casein was spiked in.  相似文献   

17.
Fragmentation of phosphorylated Tau peptides in matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) has been investigated.According to the post-source decay (PSD) in MALDI-TOF-MS, there are two different patterns of cleavage in phosphopeptides, which can be used to determine the phosphorylated site in peptides.In the synthetic tau peptides, the fragmentation at proline residue occurs strongly and this is useful to determine the structure of tau peptides.  相似文献   

18.
Amino acids residues are commonly submitted to various physicochemical modifications occurring at physiological pH and temperature. Post‐translational modifications (PTMs) require comprehensive characterization because of their major influence on protein structure and involvement in numerous in vivo process or signaling. Mass spectrometry (MS) has gradually become an analytical tool of choice to characterize PTMs; however, some modifications are still challenging because of sample faint modification levels or difficulty to separate an intact peptide from modified counterparts before their transfer to the ionization source. Here, we report the implementation of capillary zone electrophoresis coupled to electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (CZE‐ESI‐MS/MS) by the intermediate of a sheathless interfacing for independent and highly sensitive characterization of asparagine deamidation (deaN) and aspartic acid isomerization (isoD). CZE selectivity regarding deaN and isoD was studied extensively using different sets of synthetic peptides based on actual tryptic peptides. Results demonstrated CZE ability to separate the unmodified peptide from modified homologous exhibiting deaN, isoD or both independently with a resolution systematically superior to 1.29. Developed CZE‐ESI‐MS/MS method was applied for the characterization of monoclonal antibodies and complex protein mixture. Conserved CZE selectivity could be demonstrated even for complex samples, and foremost results obtained showed that CZE selectivity is similar regardless of the composition of the peptide. Separation of modified peptides prior to the MS analysis allowed to characterize and estimate modification levels of the sample independently for deaN and isoD even for peptides affected by both modifications and, as a consequence, enables to distinguish the formation of l ‐aspartic acid or d ‐aspartic acid generated from deaN. Separation based on peptide modification allowed, as supported by the ESI efficiency provided by CZE‐ESI‐MS/MS properties, and enabled to characterize and estimate studied PTMs with an unprecedented sensitivity and proved the relevance of implementing an electrophoretic driven separation for MS‐based peptide analysis. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
An integrated analytical strategy for enrichment, detection and sequencing of phosphorylated peptides by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is reported. o-Phosphoric acid was found to enhance phosphopeptide ion signals in MALDI-MS when used as the acid dopant in 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (2,5-DHB) matrix. The effect was largest for multiply phosphorylated peptides, which exhibited an up to ten-fold increase in ion intensity as compared with standard sample preparation methods. The enhanced phosphopeptide response was observed during MALDI-MS analysis of several peptide mixtures derived by proteolytic digestion of phosphoproteins. Furthermore, the mixture of 2,5-DHB and o-phosphoric acid was an excellent eluant for immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). Singly and multiply phosphorylated peptide species were efficiently recovered from Fe(III)-IMAC columns, reducing sample handling for phosphopeptide mapping by MALDI-MS and subsequent phosphopeptide sequencing by MALDI-MS/MS. The enhanced response of phosphopeptide ions in MALDI facilitates MS/MS of large (>3 kDa) multiply phosphorylated peptide species and reduces the amount of analyte needed for complete characterization of phosphoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
Because of its good biocompatibility, high surface-to-volume ratio, and distinct surface electrical properties, porous anodic alumina (PAA) membrane has been used to selectively enrich phosphopeptides from a mixture of synthetic peptides and tryptic digest product of beta-casein by a direct MALDI-TOF MS analysis. As we reported previously, PAA membrane has strong incorporation ability to the phosphate anion. Herein, we describe the application of PAA membrane as a selective sampling absorbent for phosphopeptides. The PAA membrane could enrich phosphopeptides with high efficiency and selectivity; for example, the tryptic digest product of beta-casein at a concentration as low as 4 x 10(-9) M can be satisfactorily detected. Compared to that from the nonenriching peptide mixture, the MS signal of the phosphorylated peptides enriched by the PAA membrane is remarkably improved. In addition, acidic peptides have insignificant influence on the enriching process. Results show that the adsorption of phosphate anions on the PAA membrane plays a determining role in achieving highly selective enriching capacity toward phosphopeptides. The feasibility of PAA membranes as specific absorbents for phosphopeptides is also demonstrated.  相似文献   

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