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1.
The fragmentation reactions of the [M-H](-) ions of the tripeptides H-Gly-Leu-Sar-OH, H-Leu-Gly-Pro-OH and H-Gly-Leu-Gly-OH have been investigated in detail using energy-resolved mass spectrometry, isotopic labelling and MS(3) experiments. It is shown that the major route to the "b(2) ions involves loss of a neutral amine from the a(3) ([M-H-CO(2)](-)) ion rather than being formed directly by fragmentation of the [M-H](-) ion. When there is no C-terminal amidic hydrogen (Sar, Pro), loss of a neutral amine is the dominant primary fragmentation reaction of the a(3) ion. However, when there is a C-terminal amidic hydrogen (Gly), elimination of the N-terminal amino acid residue is the major fragmentation reaction of the a(3) ion and formation of the "b(2) ion is greatly reduced in importance. It is proposed that the "b(2) ions are deprotonated oxazolones.  相似文献   

2.
Deprotonated peptides containing C-terminal glutamic acid, aspartic acid, or serine residues were studied by sustained off-resonance irradiation collision-induced dissociation (SORI-CID) in a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometer with ion production by electrospray ionization (ESI). Additional studies were performed by post source decay (PSD) in a matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time-of-flight (MALDI/TOF) mass spectrometer. This work included both model peptides synthesized in our laboratory and bioactive peptides with more complex sequences. During SORI-CID and PSD, [M - H]- and [M - 2H]2- underwent an unusual cleavage corresponding to the elimination of the C-terminal residue. Two mechanisms are proposed to occur. They involve nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon of the adjacent residue by either the carboxylate group of the C-terminus or the side chain carboxylate group of C-terminal glutamic acid and aspartic acid residues. To confirm the proposed mechanisms, AAAAAD was labelled by 18O specifically on the side chain of the aspartic acid residue. For peptides that contain multiple C-terminal glutamic acid residues, each of these residues can be sequentially eliminated from the deprotonated ions; a driving force may be the formation of a very stable pyroglutamatic acid neutral. For peptides with multiple aspartic acid residues at the C-terminus, aspartic acid residue loss is not sequential. For peptides with multiple serine residues at the C-terminus, C-terminal residue loss is sequential; however, abundant loss of other neutral molecules also occurs. In addition, the presence of basic residues (arginine or lysine) in the sequence has no effect on C-terminal residue elimination in the negative ion mode.  相似文献   

3.
The prion protein (PrP) is a Cu(2+)-binding cell-surface glycoprotein. Using PrP peptide fragments, by means of potentiometric, spectroscopic and thermodynamic techniques, we have shown that Cu(2+) ions bind to the region comprising His-96, His-111 and the octarepeat domain within residues 60-91. Cu(2+) may bind in different modes, which strongly depend both on His position within the peptide sequence and on the adjacent residues. We have used a series of protected oligopeptides having His at the C- or the N-terminus, inducing different binding modes to amide nitrogens around the His residue, either towards the N- or C-terminus. His imidazole acts as an anchoring site for Cu(2+) and then binding to ionized amide nitrogens follows. When it is directed towards the C-terminus the formation of a less stable seven-membered chelate ring with a {N(im), N(-)} binding mode occurs. When coordination goes towards the N-terminus the thermodynamically more stable six-membered chelate ring is formed. NMR data suggest that both the coordination modes are possible for the model peptides; however, the thermodynamic measurements show that they only slightly differ in energy and the influence of the adjacent amino acid residues can address the coordination toward the C- or the N-terminus.  相似文献   

4.
Protonated N-acetyltryptophan, oxindolylalanine (a mono-oxidized derivative of tryptophan), and N-acetyloxindolylalanine, as well as several di- and tripeptide derivatives containing oxindolylalanine, undergo a range of fragmentation reactions in the gas phase, including the loss of water. In order to elucidate the sites of water loss within these ions, and to determine the mechanisms associated with these processes, we have conducted a series of experiments employing multistage tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS and MS(3)) in a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer, regiospecific structural labeling, and independent solution-phase syntheses of proposed product ion structures, coupled with the use of molecular orbital calculations at the B3LYP/6-31G* level of theory. We demonstrate that the loss of H(2)O from the amide carbonyl group of protonated N-acetyltryptophan O-methyl ester occurs via a "side-chain-backbone" neighboring group reaction to yield a protonated carboline derivative. In contrast, the loss of water from the O-methyl ester of protonated oxindolylalanine results in the formation of a tricyclic structure by "backbone-side-chain" nucleophilic attack from the amino nitrogen to the C2 position of the indole ring. The O-methyl ester of protonated N-acetyloxindolylalanine was found to dissociate via the loss of water from both possible sites, i.e. from the side-chain indolyl oxygen and the backbone amide carbonyl group. An estimate of the relative preference for water loss from each site was obtained from the abundances of product ions formed from MS(3) analysis of regiospecifically labeled derivatives of N-acetyloxindolylalanine, and from the results of molecular orbital calculations. These studies indicate the absence of a characteristic 'signature' ion or neutral loss for peptides containing oxindolylalanine residues under low-energy ion trap CID conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Dissociation pathways of alkali-cationized peptides have been studied using multiple stages of mass spectrometry (MSx) with a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. Over 100 peptide ions ranging from 2 to 10 residues in length and containing each of the 20 common amino acids have been examined. The formation of the [b(n-1) + Na + OH]+ product ion is the predominant dissociation pathway for the majority of the common amino acids. This product corresponds to a sodium-cationized peptide one residue shorter in length than the original peptide. In a few cases, product ions such as [b(n-1) + Na - H]+ and those formed by loss, or partial loss, of a sidechain are observed. Both [b(n-1) + Na + OH]+ and [b(n-1) + Na - H]+ product ions can be selected as parent ions for a subsequent stage of tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). It is shown that these dissociation patterns provide opportunities for peptide sequencing by successive dissociation from the C-terminus of alkali-cationized peptides. Up to seven stages of MS/MS have been performed on a series of [b + Na + OH]+ ions to provide sequence information from the C-terminus. This method is analogous to Edman degradation except that the cleavage occurs from the C-terminus instead of the N-terminus, making it more attractive for N-terminal blocked peptides. The isomers leucine and isoleucine cannot be differentiated by this method but the isobars lysine and glutamine can.  相似文献   

6.
By screening a data set of 392 synthetic peptides MS/MS spectra, we found that a known C-terminal rearrangement was unexpectedly frequently occurring from monoprotonated molecular ions in both ESI and MALDI tandem mass spectrometry upon low and high energy collision activated dissociations with QqTOF and TOF/TOF mass analyzer configuration, respectively. Any residue localized at the C-terminal carboxylic acid end, even a basic one, was lost, provided that a basic amino acid such arginine and to a lesser extent histidine and lysine was present in the sequence leading to a fragment ion, usually depicted as (bn-1 + H2O) ion, corresponding to a shortened non-scrambled peptide chain. Far from being an epiphenomenon, such a residue exclusion from the peptide chain C-terminal extremity gave a fragment ion that was the base peak of the MS/MS spectrum in certain cases. Within the frame of the mobile proton model, the ionizing proton being sequestered onto the basic amino acid side chain, it is known that the charge directed fragmentation mechanism involved the C-terminal carboxylic acid function forming an anhydride intermediate structure. The same mechanism was also demonstrated from cationized peptides. To confirm such assessment, we have prepared some of the peptides that displayed such C-terminal residue exclusion as a C-terminal backbone amide. As expected in this peptide amide series, the production of truncated chains was completely suppressed. Besides, multiply charged molecular ions of all peptides recorded in ESI mass spectrometry did not undergo such fragmentation validating that any mobile ionizing proton will prevent such a competitive C-terminal backbone rearrangement. Among all well-known nondirect sequence fragment ions issued from non specific loss of neutral molecules (mainly H2O and NH3) and multiple backbone amide ruptures (b-type internal ions), the described C-terminal residue exclusion is highly identifiable giving raise to a single fragment ion in the high mass range of the MS/MS spectra. The mass difference between this signal and the protonated molecular ion corresponds to the mass of the C-terminal residue. It allowed a straightforward identification of the amino acid positioned at this extremity. It must be emphasized that a neutral residue loss can be misattributed to the formation of a ym-1 ion, i.e., to the loss of the N-terminal residue following the a1-ym–1 fragmentation channel. Extreme caution must be adopted when reading the direct sequence ion on the positive ion MS/MS spectra of singly charged peptides not to mix up the attribution of the N- and C-terminal amino acids. Although such peculiar fragmentation behavior is of obvious interest for de novo peptide sequencing, it can also be exploited in proteomics, especially for studies involving digestion protocols carried out with proteolytic enzymes other than trypsin (Lys-N, Glu-C, and Asp-N) that produce arginine-containing peptides.  相似文献   

7.
Effect of phenylalanine on the fragmentation of deprotonated peptides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The fragmentation reactions of a variety of deprotonated dipeptides and tripeptides containing phenylalanine have been studied using energy-resolved collision-induced dissociation, isotopic labeling and MS/MS/MS experiments. The benzyl a-group has a substantial effect on the fragmentation reactions observed. When the phenylalanine is in the C-terminal position of dipeptides or tripeptides a major fragmentation reaction is elimination of neutral cinnamic acid to from a deprotonated amino acid amide (c1 ion) for dipeptides and a deprotonated dipeptide amide (c2 ion) for tripeptides. Fragmentation of the [M - H]- ions of tripeptides with phenylalanine in the central position also results in substantial formation of the deprotonated amide of the N-terminal amino acid residue. When the phenylalanine residue is in the N-terminal position elimination of C7H8 from the [M - H - CO2]- ion and formation of the benzyl anion become important fragmentation pathways. Sequence ions frequently observed are the y1 ions, "b2 ions and a3-Nt ions.  相似文献   

8.
High-energy tandem mass spectrometry and molecular dynamics calculations are used to determine the locations of charge in metastably decomposing (M + 2H)2+ ions of human angiotensin II. Charge-separation reactions provide critical information regarding charge sites in multiple charged ions. The most probable kinetic energy released (Tm.p.) from these decompositions are obtained using kinetic energy release distributions (KERDs) in conjunction with MS/MS (MS2), MS/MS/MS (MS3), and MS/MS/MS/MS (MS4) experiments. The most abundant singly and doubly charged product ions arise from precursor ion structures in which one proton is located on the arginine (Arg) side chain and the other proton is located on a distal peptide backbone carbonyl oxygen. The MS3 KERD experiments show unequivocally that neither the N-terminal amine nor the aspartic acid (Asp) side chain are sites of protonation. In the gas phase, protonation of the less basic peptide backbone instead of the more proximal and basic histidine (His) side chain is favored as a result of reduced coulomb repulsion between the two charge sites. The singly and doubly charged product ions of lesser abundance arise from precursor ion structures in which one proton is located on the Arg side chain and the other on the His side chain. This is demonstrated in the MS3 and MS4 mass-analyzed ion kinetic energy spectrometry experiments. Interestingly, (b7" + OH)2+ product ions, like the (M + 2H)2+ ions of angiotensin II, are observed to have at least two different decomposing structures in which charge sites have a primary and secondary location.  相似文献   

9.
In a number of cases the b2 ion observed in peptide mass spectra fragments directly to the a1 ion. The present study examines the scope of this reaction and provides evidence as to the structure(s) of the b2 ions undergoing fragmentation to the a1 ion. The b2 ion H-Ala-Gly+ fragments, in part, to the a1 ion, whereas the isomeric b2 ion H-Gly-Ala+ does not fragment to the a1 ion. Ab initio calculations of ion energies show that this different behavior can be rationalized in terms of protonated oxazolone structures for the b2 ions provided one assumes a reverse activation energy of approximately 1 eV for the reaction b2-->a2; such a reverse activation energy is consistent with experimental kinetic energy release measurements. Experimentally, the H-Aib-Ala+ b2 ion, which must have a protonated oxazolone structure, fragments extensively to the a1 ion. We conclude that the proposal by Eckart et al. (J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 1998, 9, 1002) that the b2 ions which undergo fragmentation to a1 ions have an immonium ion structure is not necessary to rationalize the results, but that the fragmentation does occur from a protonated oxazolone structure. It is shown that the b2-->a1 reaction occurs extensively when the C-terminus residue in the b2 ion is Gly and with less facility when the C-terminus residue is Ala. When the C-terminus residue is Val or larger, the b2-->a1 reaction cannot compete with the b2-->a2 fragmentation reaction. Some preliminary results on the fragmentation of a2 ions are reported.  相似文献   

10.
A functional group analysis method was developed to determine the quantitative content of carbonyl functional groups in atmospheric particulate organic matter (POM) using constant neutral loss scanning-tandem mass spectrometry (CNLS-MS/MS). The neutral loss method consists in monitoring the loss of a neutral fragment produced by the fragmentation of a precursor ion in a collision cell. The only ions detected are the daughter ions resulting from the loss of the neutral fragment under study. Then, scanning the loss of a neutral fragment characteristic of a functional group enables the selective detection of the compounds bearing the chemical function under study within a complex mixture. The selective detection of carbonyl functional groups was achieved after derivatization with pentafluorophenylhydrazine (PFPH) by monitoring the neutral loss of C(6)F(5)N (181 amu), which was characteristic of a large panel of derivatized carbonyl compounds. The method was tested on 25 reference mixtures of different composition, all containing 24 carbonyl compounds at randomly determined concentrations. The repeatability and calibration tests were satisfying as they resulted in a relative standard deviation below 5% and a linear range between 0.01 and 0.65 mM with a calculated detection limit of 0.0035 mM. Also, the relative deviation induced by changing the composition of the mixture while keeping the total concentration of carbonyl functional groups constant was less than 20%. These reliability experiments demonstrate the high robustness of the developed procedure for accurate carbonyl functional group measurement, which was applied to atmospheric POM samples.  相似文献   

11.
Mass spectrometry of charged derivatives of peptides has been a growing area of interest in the past decade. Fragmentation of charged derivatives of peptides is believed to be different from than that of protonated peptides when analyzed by collisionally activated dissociation-tandem mass spectrometry (CAD-MS/MS). The charged derivatives fragment by charge-remote fragmentation mechanisms, which are usually classified as high-energy (HE)-CAD processes. Our objective in the present study is to investigate the mechanism of fragmentation of charged derivatives of peptides when analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-postsource decay-mass spectrometry (MALDI-PSD-MS) and electrospray ionization (ESI)-CAD-MS/MS (ion trap), which involve low-energy processes. Three major types of hydrogens (alpha, beta, and amide) are available for migration during the formation of the *a(n) ions (the predominant ion series produced from these charged derivatives). To pinpoint which of the three hydrogens is involved in the formation of the *a(n) ions, deuterium-labeled peptide derivatives with labels at specific sites were synthesized and analyzed by MALDI-PSD-MS and ESI-CAD-MS/MS. Our results suggest that the amide hydrogen of the residue at which the cleavage occurs shifts during the formation of *a(n); this observation serves as evidence for the mechanism proposed earlier by Liao et al. for fragmentation of such charged derivatives. The results also help elucidate the structure of the *a(n) ions, *b(n) ions, and others formed during cleavage at the proline residue, as well as the ions formed during loss of the C-terminal residue from these charged derivatives.  相似文献   

12.
Some of the most prominent "neutral losses" in peptide ion fragmentation are the loss of ammonia and water from N-terminal glutamine. These processes are studied by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry in singly- and doubly-protonated peptide ions undergoing collision-induced dissociation in a triple quadrupole and in an ion trap instrument. For this study, four sets of peptides were synthesized: (1) QLLLPLLLK and similar peptides with K replaced by R, H, or L, and Q replaced by a number of amino acids, (2) QLnK (n = 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11), (3) QLnR (n = 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9), and (4) QLn (n = 1, 2, 3, 4, 8). The results for QLLLPLLLK and QLLLPLLLR show that the singly protonated ions undergo loss of ammonia and to a smaller extent loss of water, whereas the doubly protonated ions undergo predominant loss of water. The fast fragmentation next to P (forming the y5 ion) occurs to a larger extent than the neutral losses from the singly protonated ions but much less than the water loss from the doubly protonated ions. The results from these and other peptides show that, in general, when N-terminal glutamine peptides have no "mobile protons", that is, the number of charges on the peptide is no greater than the number of basic amino acids (K, R, H), deamination is the predominant neutral loss fragmentation, but when mobile protons are present the predominant process is the loss of water. Both of these processes are faster than backbone fragmentation at the proline. These results are rationalized on the basis of resonance stabilization of the two types of five-membered ring products that would be formed in the neutral loss processes; the singly protonated ion yields the more stable neutral pyrrolidinone ring whereas the doubly protonated ion yields the protonated aminopyrroline ring (see Schemes). The generality of these trends is confirmed by analyzing an MS/MS spectra library of peptides derived from tryptic digests of yeast. In the absence of mobile protons, glutamine deamination is the most rapid neutral loss process. For peptides with mobile protons, dehydration from glutamine is far more rapid than from any other amino acid. Most strikingly, end terminal glutamine is by far the most labile source of neutral loss in excess-proton peptides, but not highly exceptional when mobile protons are not available. In addition, rates of deamination are faster in lysine versus arginine C-terminus peptides and 20 times faster in positively charged than negatively charged peptides, demonstrating that these formal neutral loss reactions are not "neutral reactions" but depend on charge state and stability.  相似文献   

13.
A c1 ion was observed with significant yield in the tandem mass (MS/MS) spectra of peptide ions containing glutamine as the second amino acid residue from the N-terminus. The c1 fragment was generated independently of the N-terminal residue of the peptide, but its abundance was strongly dependent on the side-chain identity. This ion is not a common fragmentation product in low-energy collision-induced dissociation of peptide ions, but it assists in identification of the first two amino acid residues, often difficult due to a low or absent signal from the heaviest y ion. A consecutive fragmentation mechanism is proposed, involving a b2 ion with a six-membered ring as an intermediate, to explain the exceptional stability of the c1 fragment ion. The utility of this information is discussed, especially in de novo sequencing of peptide ions.  相似文献   

14.
In mass spectrometry of protonated N-phenylcinnamides, the carbonyl oxygen is the thermodynamically most favorable protonation site and the added proton is initially localized on it. Upon collisional activation, the proton transfers from the carbonyl oxygen to the dissociative protonation site at the amide nitrogen atom or the α-carbon atom, leading to the formation of important reactive intermediates. When the amide nitrogen atom is protonated, the amide bond is facile to rupture to form ion/neutral complex 1, [RC(6)H(4)CH[double bond, length as m-dash]CHCO(+)/aniline]. Besides the dissociation of the complex, proton transfer reaction from the α-carbon atom to the nitrogen atom within the complex takes place, leading to the formation of protonated aniline. The presence of electron-withdrawing groups favored the proton transfer reaction, whereas electron-donating groups strongly favored the dissociation (aniline loss). When the proton transfers from the carbonyl oxygen to the α-carbon atom, the cleavage of the C(α)-CONHPh bond results in another ion/neutral complex 2, [PhNHCO(+)/RC(6)H(4)CH[double bond, length as m-dash]CH(2)]. However, in this case, electron-donating groups expedited the proton transfer reaction from the charged to the neutral partner to eliminate phenyl isocyanate. Besides the cleavage of the C(α)-CONHPh bond, intramolecular nucleophilic substitution (a nucleophilic attack of the nitrogen atom at the β-carbon) and stepwise proton transfer reactions (two 1,2-H shifts) also take place when the α-carbon atom is protonated, resulting in the loss of ketene and RC(6)H(5), respectively. In addition, the H/D exchanges between the external deuterium and the amide hydrogen, vinyl hydrogens and the hydrogens of the phenyl rings were discovered by D-labeling experiments. Density functional theory-based (DFT) calculations were performed to shed light on the mechanisms for these reactions.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrogens connected to α‐carbon (α‐C) of amino acid residues are usually resistant to hydrogen‐deuterium exchange (HDX) unless reaction conditions promote racemization. Although N‐methylglycine (sarcosine) residue has been found in biologically active peptide such as cyclosporine, to the best of our knowledge, the HDX of α‐C protons of this residue was not explored yet. Here, we presented a new and efficient methodology of α‐C deuteration in sarcosine residues under basic aqueous conditions. The deuterons, introduced at α‐C atom, do not undergo back‐exchange in acidic aqueous solution. The electrospray ionization‐MS and MS/MS experiments on proposed model peptides confirmed the HDX at α‐C and revealed the unexpected hydrogen scrambling in sarcosine‐containing peptides. Although the observed HDX of α‐C protons is only successful in N‐acylglycine when the amide possesses a certain degree of alkylation, it offers a new approach to the analysis of sarcosine‐containing peptides such as cyclosporine. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
UV resonance Raman spectra (UVRS) of an alpha-helical, 21 residue, mainly Ala peptide (AP) in the dehydrated solid state were compared to those in aqueous solution at different temperatures. The UVRS amide band frequencies of a dehydrated solid alpha-helix peptide show frequency shifts compared to those in aqueous solution due to the loss of amide backbone hydrogen bonding to water; the amide II and amide III bands of the solid alpha-helix downshift, while the amide I band upshifts. The shifts are identical in direction but smaller than those that occur for alpha-helices in aqueous solution as the temperature increases; water hydrogen bonding strengths decrease as the temperature increases. The UV Raman amide band frequency shifts can be used to monitor alpha-helix hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

17.
Oxidative modifications to amino acid side chains can change the dissociation pathways of peptide ions, although these variations are most commonly observed when cysteine and methionine residues are oxidized. In this work we describe the very noticeable effect that oxidation of histidine residues can have on the dissociation patterns of peptide ions containing this residue. A common product ion spectral feature of doubly charged tryptic peptides is enhanced cleavage at the C-terminal side of histidine residues. This preferential cleavage arises as a result of the unique acid/base character of the imidazole side chain that initiates cleavage of a proximal peptide bond for ions in which the number of protons does not exceed the number of basic residues. We demonstrate here that this enhanced cleavage is eliminated when histidine is oxidized to 2-oxo-histidine because the proton affinity and nucleophilicity of the imidazole side chain are lowered. Furthermore, we find that oxidation of histidine to 2-oxo-histidine can cause the misassignment of oxidized residues when more than one oxidized isomer is simultaneously subjected to tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). These spectral misinterpretations can usually be avoided by using multiple stages of MS/MS (MS(n)) or by specially optimized liquid chromatographic separation conditions. When these approaches are not accessible or do not work, N-terminal derivatization with sulfobenzoic acid avoids the problem of mistakenly assigning oxidized residues.  相似文献   

18.
The dissociation of deprotonated peptides containing hydroxyl side chains was studied by electrospray ionization coupled with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (ESI-FTICR) via sustained off-resonance irradiation collision induced dissociation (SORI-CID). Dissociation under post-source decay (PSD) conditions was performed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF). This work included hexapeptides with one residue of serine, threonine, or tyrosine and five inert alanine residues. During SORI-CID and PSD, dissociation of [M-H](-) yielded c- and y-ions. Side-chain losses of formaldehyde (HCHO) from serine-containing peptides, acetaldehyde (CH(3)CHO) from threonine-containing peptides, and 4-methylene-2,5-cycohexadienone (C(7)H(6)O) from tyrosine-containing peptides were generally observed in the negative ion PSD and SORI-CID spectra. Side-chain loss occurs much less from tyrosine-containing peptides than from serine- and threonine-containing peptides. This is probably due to the bulky side chain of tyrosine, resulting in steric hindrance and poor geometry for dissociation reactions. Additionally, a selective cleavage leading to the elimination of the C-terminal residue from [M-H](-) was observed from the peptides with serine and threonine at the C-terminus. This cleavage does not occur in the dissociation of peptides with an amide group at the C-terminus or peptides with neutral or basic residues at the C-terminus. It also does not occur with tyrosine at the C-terminus. Both the C-terminal carboxylic acid group and the hydroxyl side chain of the C-terminal residue must play important roles in the mechanism of C-terminal residue loss. A mechanism involving both the C-terminal carboxylic acid group and a hydroxyl side chain of serine and threonine is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
Positive- and negative-ion MSn spectra of chicken egg yolk glycopeptides binding a neutral and a sialylated N-glycan were acquired by using electrospray ionization linear ion trap time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ESI-LIT-TOFMS) and collision-induced dissociation (CID) with helium as collision gas. Several characteristic differences were observed between the positive- and negative-ion CID MSn (n = 2, 3) spectra. In the positive-ion MS2 spectra, the peptide moiety was presumably stable, but the neutral N-glycan moiety caused several B-type fragmentations and the sialylated N-glycan almost lost sialic acid(s). In contrast, in the negative-ion MS2 spectra, the peptide moiety caused several side-chain and N-glycan residue (e.g., N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) residue) fragmentations in addition to backbone cleavages, but the N-glycan moieties were relatively stable. The positive-ion MS3 spectra derived from the protonated peptide ion containing a GlcNAc residue (203.1 Da) provided enough information to determine the peptide amino-acid sequence including the glycosylation site, while the negative-ion MS3 spectra derived from the deprotonated peptide containing a 0,2X1-type cross-ring cleavage (83.1 Da) complicated the peptide sequence analysis due to side-chain and 0,2X1 residue related fragmentations. However, for the structural information of the N-glycan moiety of the glycopeptides, the negative-ion CID MS3 spectra derived from the deprotonated 2,4A6-type cross-ring cleavage ion (neutral N-glycan) or the doubly deprotonated B6-type fragment ion (sialylated N-glycan) are more informative than are those of the corresponding positive-ion CID MS3 spectra. Thus, the positive-ion mode of CID is useful for the analyses of peptide amino-acid sequences including the glycosylation site. The negative-ion mode of CID is especially useful for sialylated N-glycan structural analysis. Therefore, in the structural analysis of N-glycopeptides, their roles are complementary.  相似文献   

20.
We have examined the multi-stage collision induced dissociation (CID) of metal cationized leucine enkephalin, leucine enkephalin amide, and the N-acetylated versions of the peptides using ion trap mass spectrometry. In accord with earlier studies, the most prominent species observed during the multi-stage CID of alkali metal cationized leucine enkephalin are the [b(n) + 17 + Cat]+ ions. At higher CID stages (i.e. >MS(4)), however, dissociation of the [b2 + 17 + Cat]+ ion, a cationized dipeptide, results in the production of [a(n) -1 + Cat]+ species. The multi-stage CID of Ag+ cationized leucine enkephalin can be initiated with either the [b(n) -1 + Ag]+ or [b(n) + 17 + Ag]+ ions produced at the MS/MS stage. For the former, sequential CID stages cause, in general, the loss of CO, and then the loss of the imine of the C-terminal amino acid, to reveal the amino acid sequence. Similar to the alkali cationized species, CID of [b2 -1 + Ag]+ produces prominent [a(n) -1 + Ag]+ ions. The multi-stage CID of argentinated peptides is reminiscent of fragmentation observed for protonated peptides, in that a series of (b(n)) and (a(n)) type ions are generated in sequential CID stages. The Ag+ cation is similar to the alkali metals, however, in that the [b(n) + 17 + Ag]+ product is produced at the MS/MS and MS3 stages, and that sequential CID stages cause the elimination of amino acid residues primarily from the C-terminus. We found that N-acetylation of the peptide significantly influenced the fragmentation pathways observed, in particular by promoting the formation of more easily interpreted (in the context of unambiguous sequence determination) dissociation spectra from the [b2 + 17 + Li]+, [b2 + 17 + Na]+ and [b2 -1 + Ag]+ precursor ions. Our results suggest, therefore, that N-acetylation may improve the efficacy of multi-stage CID experiments for C-terminal peptide sequencing in the gas phase. For leucine enkephalin amide, only the multi-stage CID of the argentinated peptide allowed the complete amino acid sequence to be determined from the C-terminal side.  相似文献   

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