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1.
Peptide samples derived from enzymatic in‐gel digestion of proteins resolved by gel electrophoresis often contain high amount of salts originating from reaction and separation buffers. Different methods are used for desalting prior to matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry (MS), e.g. reversed‐phase pipette tip purification, on‐target washing, adding co‐matrices, etc. As a suitable matrix for MALDI MS of peptides, α‐cyano‐4‐hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) is frequently used. Crystalline CHCA shows the ability to bind peptides on its surface and because it is almost insoluble in acidic water solutions, the on‐target washing of peptide samples can significantly improve MALDI MS signals. Although the common on‐target washing represents a simple, cheap and fast procedure, only a small portion of the available peptide solution is efficiently used for the subsequent MS analysis. The present approach is a combination of the on‐target washing principle carried out in a narrow‐end pipette tip (e.g. GELoader tip) and preconcentration of peptides from acidified solution by passing it through small CHCA crystals captured inside the tip on a glass microfiber frit. The results of MALDI MS analysis using CHCA‐tip peptide preconcentration are comparable with the use of homemade POROS R2 pipette tip microcolumns. Advantages and limitations of this approach are discussed. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
Tryptic peptides were labeled with sulfonic acid groups at the N-termini using an improved chemistry. The derivatization was performed in common aqueous buffers on peptides adsorbed onto a ZipTip trade mark C(18), thus allowing simultaneous desalting/concentration of the sample. When only Arg-terminating peptides were considered, the procedure from adsorption onto the ZipTip until analysis by MALDI-PSD took about 10 min and several samples could be worked on in parallel. The resulting improved post-source decay (PSD) fragmentation produced spectra containing only y-ions. PSD amino acid sequencing of underivatized and derivatized synthetic peptides was compared. From the sequence information obtained from derivatized peptides isolated by ion selection from tryptic in-gel digests, a protein was correctly identified which was difficult to analyze from an unclear peptide mass fingerprint analysis. The method was also applied to the identification and localization of phosphorylated Ser and Tyr residues in native and synthetic peptides.  相似文献   

3.
Yu W  Li Y  Deng C  Zhang X 《Electrophoresis》2006,27(11):2100-2110
A coupling of capillary RP LC as the first dimension with CIEF as the second dimension followed by MALDI-MS identification was demonstrated. Based on 2-D separation system developed by our group (Electrophoresis 2003, 24, 3289-3295), this paper focused on incorporating tryptic digestion into the top-down proteomics methodology, retaining the benefits of the top-down method. Hydrophobic layer of packing-material C18 coated with SE-30 on the MALDI-target surface was used to permit the CIEF fractions to be easily concentrated and free of ampholytes using on-target washing. Following the removal of ampholytes, on-target tryptic digestion was performed to generate PMF for protein identification. Using the proteome analytical strategy, we could obtain not only intact protein pI value but also PMF for accurate protein identification. The feasibility of the strategy was first tested with a mixture of model proteins with different pIs and molecular masses. Proteome of rat liver tissue extracts was further analyzed using the system for verification. The results have shown that the system is effective for complex proteomic analysis.  相似文献   

4.
Large-scale mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomic analyses require high-throughput sample preparation techniques due to the increasing numbers of samples that make up a typical proteomics experiment. Moreover, extensive sample pre-treatment steps are necessary prior to MS acquisition for even the most rapid and robust MS-based proteomics methodology, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) MS followed by peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) analysis. These include sample purification and fractionation, removal of digestion buffers or solvents, and spotting of sample with matrix onto the MALDI target. These multiple steps of time-consuming sample handling can result in high overall analysis costs and the likelihood of sample contamination and loss. In order to overcome some of these limitations in sample processing, we have investigated the use of a novel, simple, inexpensive 96-well elastomeric array that affixes to a MALDI target to create an on-target 96-well plate that accommodates a high solution volume (ca. 200 microL), thereby enabling the on-target processing of samples for MALDI-TOFMS. We explored several factors that influence MALDI sample preparation: type of matrix, solution volume, solution organic composition, solution drying rates and matrix/analyte co-crystallization methods. We also investigated the use of the 96-well elastomeric device for coupling MALDI-TOFMS analysis directly to high flow rate (1 mL/min) reversed-phase (rp)-HPLC. By developing an optimized, robust sample preparation protocol, we were able to obtain mass spectra with a high signal-to-noise ratio from peptide standards present at the 50-fmol level in large starting volumes of solution. PMF analyses were possible from 1-pmol and 500-fmol protein-digest standards. Coupling the device to high-flow HPLC (750 microL/min) yielded a robust and semi-automated means to obtain enhanced MALDI-TOFMS data at 500 ng of protein digest. These methodologies developed for this simple, on-target, elastomeric device show promise for streamlining the sample preparation process from HPLC to MALDI-MS.  相似文献   

5.
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) was coupled off-line with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS) for the analysis of proteins and peptides. CE fractions were collected directly on a matrix-coated MALDI target, using a sheath-flow interface. Protein adsorption during CE separations was prevented by coating the capillaries with the physically adsorbed, cationic polymer PolyE-323. The CE/MALDI-MS system was used for the analysis of model proteins and peptides at physiological pH as well as analysis of proteins in tear fluid. Moreover, tryptic on-target digestion of the collected protein fractions, with subsequent MALDI-MS and MS/MS peptide analysis, was demonstrated.  相似文献   

6.
We demonstrate that magnetic mesocellular carbon foams (Mag-MCF-C) can be effectively used for enrichment and desalting of protein digests or peptides in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS). The large mesocellular pores and surface area of Mag-MCF-C are likely to mainly contribute to high efficiency in enrichment and desalting of protein digests. The magnetic property of Mag-MCF-C enabled easy and simple enrichment and desalting process comprising adsorption, washing, and separation steps by using an external magnet. Following elution from Mag-MCF-C by using a matrix solution (CHCA in 70% ACN/0.1% TFA), the peptides were subjected to MALDI-MS analysis. As a result, MALDI mass spectra of peptides or tryptic protein digests were distinct even at a peptide concentration as low as 50 pM. The use of Mag-MCF-C resulted in significantly improved sequence coverage for protein identification when compared to other conventional methods. Mag-MCF-C will find applications in mass spectrometric analysis of low abundance peptides or protein digests with high sensitivity.  相似文献   

7.
Proteins with molecular mass (M(r)) <20 kDa are often poorly separated in 2-D sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In addition, low-M(r) proteins may not be readily identified using peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) owing to the small number of peptides generated in tryptic digestion. In this work, we used a 2-D liquid separation method based on chromatofocusing and non-porous silica reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography to purify proteins for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometric (MALDI-TOFMS) analysis and protein identification. Several proteins were identified using the PMF method where the result was supported using an accurate M(r) value obtained from electrospray ionization TOFMS. However, many proteins were not identified owing to an insufficient number of peptides observed in the MALDI-TOF experiments. The small number of peptides detected in MALDI-TOFMS can result from internal fragmentation, the few arginines in its sequence and incomplete tryptic digestion. MALDI-QTOFMS/MS can be used to identify many of these proteins. The accurate experimental M(r) and pI confirm identification and aid in identifying post-translational modifications such as truncations and acetylations. In some cases, high-quality MS/MS data obtained from the MALDI-QTOF spectrometer overcome preferential cleavages and result in protein identification.  相似文献   

8.
A novel combination of methods, two-dimensional liquid-phase electrophoresis (2D-LPE) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS), have been used for the analysis of intact brain-specific proteins in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). 2D-LPE is especially useful for isolating proteins present in low concentrations in complex biological samples. The proteins are separated in the first dimension by liquid-phase isoelectric focusing (IEF) in the Rotofor cell and in the second dimension by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) in the Preparative cell. The removal of SDS by chloroform/methanol/water, followed by sample preparation with the addition of n-octylglucoside, easily interfaced 2D-LPE with MALDI-TOFMS for analysis of intact proteins. Further characterization by proteolytic digestion is also demonstrated. The knowledge of both the molecular weights of the protein and of the proteolytic fragments obtained by peptide mapping increases specificity for protein identification by searching in protein sequence databases. Two brain-specific proteins in human CSF, cystatin C and transthyretin, were isolated in sufficient quantity for determination of the mass of the whole proteins and their tryptic digest by MALDI-TOFMS. This approach simplified the interface between electrophoresis and MALDI-TOFMS.  相似文献   

9.
Li J  Li X  Guo Z  Yu L  Zou L  Liang X 《The Analyst》2011,136(19):4075-4082
Desalting peptides before mass spectrometry analysis is important because salts lead to adduct formation, increased chemical noise and ion suppression effect. A high concentration of salt can clog nanoelectrospray ionization (ESI) emitters. The reverse phase C18 material is commonly used to desalt peptides because of its high binding capacity. However, peptides with high hydrophilicity, such as glycopeptides, are not retained well on this material, resulting in the loss of peptide information. To improve the efficiency of glycopeptide desalting, we introduced a hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC)-based material named click maltose. Four glycoproteins, horseradish peroxidase (HRP), human serum immunoglobulin G (IgG), bovine ribonuclease B (RNase B), and α-1 acid glycoprotein (AGP) were chosen as models and their glycopeptides were desalted with click maltose, AQ C18, Empore C18 and ZipTip C18. Click maltose as a HILIC material exhibited better performance than the other three C18 materials for both number of targeted glycopeptides and their corresponding intensities. In addition, accurate glycopeptide profiling was achieved with click maltose desalting regardless of peptide lengths and glycan types.  相似文献   

10.
A comparative analysis of protein identification for a total of 162 protein spots separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis from two fully sequenced archaea, Methanococcus jannaschii and Pyrococcus furiosus, using MALDI-TOF peptide mass mapping (PMM) and mu LC-MS/MS is presented. 100% of the gel spots analyzed were successfully matched to the predicted proteins in the two corresponding open reading frame databases by mu LC-MS/MS while 97% of them were identified by MALDI-TOF PMM. The high success rate from the PMM resulted from sample desalting/concentrating with ZipTip(C18) and optimization of several PMM search parameters including a 25 ppm average mass tolerance and the application of two different protein molecular weight search windows. By using this strategy, low-molecular weight (<23 kDa) proteins could be identified unambiguously with less than 5 peptide matches. Nine percent of spots were identified as containing multiple proteins. By using mu LC-MS/MS, 50% of the spots analyzed were identified as containing multiple proteins. mu LC-MS/MS demonstrated better protein sequence coverage than MALDI-TOF PMM over the entire mass range of proteins identified. MALDI-TOF and PMM produced unique peptide molecular weight matches that were not identified by mu LC-MS/MS. By incorporating amino acid sequence modifications into database searches, combined sequence coverage obtained from these two complimentary ionization methods exceeded 50% for approximately 70% of the 162 spots analyzed. This improved sequence coverage in combination with enzymatic digestions of different specificity is proposed as a method for analysis of post-translational modification from 2D-gel separated proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Purification methods for proteomics samples are of crucial concern for improving the quality of the sample delivered to the mass spectrometer. They constitute the link between the mass spectrometer and protein processing and peptide isolation steps that usually require solvents, buffers, or detergents completely incompatible with MS-analysis conditions. This work describes three new clean-up procedures using synthetic membranes and polymer media and compares them with standard procedures. The efficiency of each of the purification procedures was studied via application to four standards and two membrane proteins. This work highlights the importance of versatility in sample preparation, especially for MS-based proteomic investigations. Figure PMF spectra obtained after MALDI-TOF measurements of bovine mitochondrial complex III (A) and complex IV (B) in-solution digests, with and without purification  相似文献   

12.
The use of robots has major effects on maximizing the proteomic workflow required in an increasing number of high-throughput projects and on increasing the quality of the data. In peptide mass finger printing (PMF), automation of steps downstream of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis is essential. To achieve this goal, the workflow must be fluid. We have developed tools using macros written in Microsoft Excel and Word to complete the automation of our platform. Additionally, because sample preparation is crucial for identification of proteins by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry, we optimized a sandwich method usable by any robot for spotting digests on a MALDI target. This procedure enables further efficient automated washing steps directly on the MALDI target. The success rate of PMF identification was evaluated for the automated sandwich method, and for the dried-droplet method implemented on the robot as recommended by the manufacturer. Of the two methods, the sandwich method achieved the highest identification success rate and sequence coverage of proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Structural studies of the high molecular weight (HMW) glutenin subunits 1Dy10 and 1Dy12 of bread wheat were conducted using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS) and reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography/electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (RP-HPLC/ESI-MS). For both proteins, MALDI-TOFMS analysis showed that the isolated fractions contained a second component with a mass about 500-540 Da lower than the major component. The testing and correction of the gene-derived amino acid sequences of both proteins were performed by direct MALDI-TOFMS analysis of their tryptic peptide mixture and analysis of the digests was performed by recording several MALDI mass spectra of the mixture at low, medium and high mass ranges, optimising the matrix and the acquisition parameters for each mass range. Complementary data were obtained by RP-HPLC/ESI-MS analysis of the tryptic digest. This resulted in the coverage of the whole protein sequences except for two short fragments (T1 and T8), which are identical in the two homologous subunits, and for an additional dipeptide (T14) in subunit 1Dy12, which were not detected. It also demonstrated that, in contrast to the gene-derived data, the sequence of subunit 1Dy12 does not include the dipeptide Gly-Gln between residues Gln(454) and Pro(455), and that the lower mass components present in both fractions correspond to the same sequences lacking short peptides that are probably lost from the protein N- or C-termini. Finally, the results obtained provide evidence for the lack of a substantial level of glycosylation or other post-translational modifications of the two subunits, and demonstrate that mass spectrometric mapping is the most useful method presently available for the direct verification of the gene-derived sequences of HMW glutenin subunits and similar proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The selective enrichment of specific proteins or peptides on micropipette tips prior to mass spectrometry analysis, which can minimize non-specific interferences as well as sample loss, has been an important issue in current proteomics field. In this paper, we have developed an easy-to-use phosphopeptide-selective pipette tip in which titanium dioxide nanoparticles were embedded in monolithic structure photopolymerized from ethylene glycol dimethacrylate. The simple and convenient fabrication was feasible in a commercial polypropylene pipette tip. Phosphorylated peptides were isolated from non-phosphopeptides by TiO(2) nanoparticle and eluted by 100 mM ammonium phosphate (pH 8.5), which was compatible with 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB)/1% phosphoric acid matrix and allowed for direct analysis of the elution fraction by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) without the necessity of desalting pretreatment. Tryptic digested alpha-casein and beta-casein spiked into bovine serum albumin (BSA) nonphosphorylated peptides (molar ratio 1:1:10) were used to assess the selectivity of TiO(2) tips. The effect of 50 mM ammonium hydrogencarbonate, pH 8 in 50% acetonitrile used as a wash buffer in reduction of nonspecific bound peptide to TiO(2) tip was dramatic. Almost all non-phosphopeptides were not detected by MALDI-MS analysis. The lowest detectable amount of phosphopeptide was estimated at low femtomole level. The easy-to-use TiO(2)-embeded tips operated in combination with the modified wash and elution conditions enable an efficient phosphopeptide enrichment for mass spectrometric analysis.  相似文献   

15.
Specific capture of phosphopeptides from protein digests is a critical step for identification of phosphoproteins by mass spectrometry. In this study, we report a novel phosphopeptide-capture approach based on the specific interaction of phosphopeptides with a stainless steel target modified with magnetic affinity nanoparticles. The modification which was carried out by loading the suspension of nanoparticles into sample wells of the target did not require any pretreatment procedure to the target and did not involve chemical binding reactions. To isolate phosphopeptides, digests were loaded into the wells of the modified target for 10 min incubation, followed by rinsing with washing buffer to remove unbound species; matrix was then added to the captured phosphopeptides prior to analysis by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS). Capturing the phosphopeptides on the modified target simplified significantly analytical operations and reduced sample loss. This approach has been applied to solution digests of alpha-casein, beta-casein, and a mixture of five proteins; a number of phosphopeptides were confidently detected. Phosphopeptides from digests of 10 fmol beta-casein could be isolated and detected by MALDI-TOFMS with this method. In addition, this approach has been applied successfully to the isolation of phosphopeptides from in-gel digestive products of sub-pmol phosphoproteins after separation by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).  相似文献   

16.
Finehout EJ  Lee KH 《Electrophoresis》2003,24(19-20):3508-3516
A comparison of automated in-gel digestion methods for low picomolar to femtomolar levels of protein is presented. Gel spots with 4 pmol to 120 fmol of protein were stained with either Coomassie colloidal blue or SYPRO Ruby and digested using an automated platform. The sequence coverages and average peak intensities obtained from a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) analysis are compared. Results show that methods using an acetonitrile extraction or digest times greater than the standard 4 h give no significant increase in peptide sequence coverage for automated digestion of low protein level samples. It is also shown that digests from SYPRO Ruby-stained gels show a greater improvement upon ZipTip cleanup than digests from Coomassie colloidal blue-stained gels. The digests from SYPRO Ruby-stained gels are also shown to give a higher average peptide intensity if a method with minimal gel plug washing is used.  相似文献   

17.
Peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) is a powerful technique in which experimentally measured m/z values of peptides resulting from a protein digest form the basis for a characteristic fingerprint of the intact protein. Due to its propensity to generate singly charged ions, along with its relative insensitivity to salts and buffers, matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization (MALDI)-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS) is the MS method of choice for PMF. The qualitative features of the mass spectrum can be selectively tuned by employing different methods to prepare the protein digest and matrix for MALDI-TOFMS. The selective tuning of MALDI mass spectra in order to optimize PMF is addressed here. Bovine serum albumin, carbonic anhydrase, cytochrome c, hemoglobin alpha- and beta-chain, and myoglobin were digested with trypsin and then analyzed by MALDI-TOFMS. 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) and alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) were prepared using six different sample preparation methods: dried droplet, application of protein digest on MALDI plate followed by addition of matrix, dried droplet with vacuum drying, overlayer, sandwich, and dried droplet with heating. Improved results were obtained for the matrix alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid using a modification of the died droplet method in which the MALDI plate was heated to 80 °C prior to matrix application, which is supported by observations from scanning electron microscopy. Although each protein was found to have a different optimum sample preparation method for PMF, in general higher sequence coverage for PMF was obtained using DHB. The best PMF results were obtained when all of the mass spectral data for a particular protein digest was convolved together.  相似文献   

18.
In this study we have investigated whether micro-solution isoelectric focusing (microsol-IEF) can be used as a pre-fractionation step prior to liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) and if extensive sample purification of the different fractions is required. We found that, in spite of the high concentrations of buffer and detergents, no clean up of the digested microsol-IEF fractions was necessary before analysis by LC/MS/MS. We also concluded that it is possible to identify at least twice as many proteins in a glioma cell lysate with the combination of microsol-IEF and LC/MS/MS than with LC/MS/MS alone. Furthermore, most of the proteins that were identified from one microsol-IEF fraction by using analytical narrow-range two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) and peptide mass fingerprinting with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS) were also identified by LC/MS/MS. Finally, we used the combination of microsol-IEF and LC/MS/MS to compare two sample preparation methods for glioma cells and found that several nuclear, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum proteins were only present in the sample that had been subjected to lipid extraction by incubating the homogenized cells in chloroform/methanol/water.  相似文献   

19.
Small-mass-difference modifications to proteins are obscured in mass spectrometry by the natural abundance of stable isotopes such as 13C that broaden the isotopic distribution of an intact protein. Using a ZipTip (Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA) to remove salt from proteins in preparation for high-resolution mass spectrometry, the theoretical isotopic distribution intensities calculated from the protein’s empirical formula could be fit to experimentally acquired data and used to differentiate between multiple low-mass modifications to proteins. We could readily distinguish copper from zinc bound to a single-metal superoxide dismutase (SOD1) species; copper and zinc only differ by an average mass of 1.8 Da and have overlapping stable isotope patterns. In addition, proteins could be directly modified while bound to the ZipTip. For example, washing 11 mM S-methyl methanethiosulfonate over the ZipTip allowed the number of free cysteines on proteins to be detected as S-methyl adducts. Alternatively, washing with the sulfhydryl oxidant diamide could quickly reestablish disulfide bridges. Using these methods, we could resolve the relative contributions of copper and zinc binding, as well as disulfide reduction to intact SOD1 protein present from <100 μg of the lumbar spinal cord of a transgenic, SOD1 overexpressing mouse. Although techniques like ICP-MS can measure total metal in solution, this is the first method able to assess the metal-binding and sulfhydryl reduction of SOD1 at the individual subunit level and is applicable to many other proteins.   相似文献   

20.
Derivatization of tryptic peptides using an Ettan CAF matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) sequencing kit in combination with MALDI-post source decay (PSD) is a fast, accurate and convenient way to obtain de novo or confirmative peptide sequencing data. CAF (chemically assisted fragmentation) is based on solid-phase derivatization using a new class of water stable sulfonation agents, which strongly improves PSD analysis and simplifies the interpretation of acquired spectra. The derivatization is performed on solid supports, ZipTip(microC18, limiting the maximum peptide amount to 5 microg. By performing the derivatization in solution enabled the labeling of tryptic peptides derived from 100 microg of protein. To increase the number of peptides that could be sequenced, derivatized peptides were purified using multidimensional liquid chromatography (MDLC) prior to MALDI sequencing. Following the first dimension strong cation exchange (SCX) chromatography step, modified peptides were separated using reversed-phase chromatography (RPC). During the SCX clean up step, positively charged peptides are retained on the column while properly CAF-derivatized peptides (uncharged) are not. A moderately complex tryptic digest, prepared from six different proteins of equimolar amounts, was CAF-derivatized and purified by MDLC. Fractions from the second dimension nano RPC step were automatically sampled and on-line dispensed to MALDI sample plates and analyzed using MALDI mass spectrometry fragmentation techniques. All proteins in the derivatized protein mixture digest were readily identified using MALDI-PSD or MALDI tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). More than 40 peptides were unambiguously sequenced, representing a seven-fold increase in the number of sequenced peptides in comparison to when the CAF-derivatized protein mix digest was analyzed directly (no MDLC-separation) using MALDI-PSD. In conclusion, MDLC purification of CAF-derivatized peptides significantly increases the success rate for de novo and confirmative sequencing using various MALDI fragmentation techniques. This new approach is not only applicable to single protein digests but also to more complex digests and could, thus, be an alternative to electrospray ionization MS/MS for peptide sequencing.  相似文献   

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