首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Dissociation of the amide bonds in a protonated peptide leads to N-terminal sequence fragments with cyclic structures and C-terminal sequence fragments with linear structures. The ionic fragments containing the N-terminus (b n ) have been shown to be protonated oxazolones, whereas those containing the C-terminus (y n ) are protonated linear peptides. The coproduced neutral fragments are cyclic peptides from the N-terminus and linear peptides from the C-terminus. A likely determinant of these structural choices is the proton affinity (PA) of the described peptide segments. This study determines the PA values of such segments (Pep), i.e., cyclic and linear dipeptides and a relevant oxazolone, based on the dissociations of proton-bound dimers [Pep + B i ]H+ in which B i is a reference base of known PA value (Cooks kinetic method). The dissociations are assessed at different internal energies to thereby obtain both proton affinities as well as entropies of protonation. For species with comparable amino acid composition, the proton affinity (and gas phase basicity) follows the order cyclic peptide ≪ oxazolone ≈ linear peptide. This ranking is consistent with dissociation of the protonated peptide via interconverting proton-bound complexes involving N-terminal oxazolone (O) or cyclopeptide (C) segments and C-terminal linear peptide segments (L), viz. O ⋯ H+ ⋯ L ⇄ C ⋯ H+ ⋯ L. N-terminal sequence ions (b n ) are formed with oxazolone structures which can efficiently compete for the proton with the linear segments. On the other hand, N-terminal neutral fragments detach as cyclic peptides, with H+ now being retained by the more basic linear segment from the C-terminus to yield y n .  相似文献   

2.
B ions represent an important type of fragment ions derived from protonated peptides by cleavage of an amide bond with N-terminal charge retention. Such species have also been discussed as key intermediates during cyclic peptide fragmentation. Detailed structural information on such ion types can facilitate the interpretation of multiple step fragmentations such as the formation of inner chain fragments from linear peptides or the fragmentation of cyclic peptides. The structure of different b2 ion isomers was investigated with collision-induced dissociations (CID) in combination with hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange of the acidic protons. Special care was taken to investigate fragment ions derived from pure gas-phase processes. Structures deduced from the results of the CID analysis were compared with structures predicted on the basis of quantum chemical density functional theory (DFT) calculations to be most stable. The results pointed to different types of structures for b2 ion isomers of complementary amino acid sequences. Either the protonated oxazolone structure or the N-terminally protonated immonium ion structure were proposed on the basis of the CID results and the DFT calculations. In addition, the analysis of different selectively N-alkylated peptide analogs revealed mechanistic details of the processes generating b ions.  相似文献   

3.
Quantum chemical and RRKM calculations were performed on protonated GGG in order to determine the atomic details of the main fragmentation pathways leading to formation of b(2),y(1), and y(2) ions. Formation of y(1) ions on the "diketopiperazine" pathway is initiated from relatively high-energy C-terminal amide nitrogen protonated species for which the N-terminal amide bond is in the cis isomerization state. The reaction goes through a transition structure which is only slightly less favored than the reactive configuration itself. RRKM calculations indicate that this reaction is extremely fast as soon as the fragmenting species have more internal energy than the reaction threshold. The calculated energetics suggests that y(1) ions are formed on the "diketopiperazine" pathway with a non-negligible (6-10 kcal/mol) reverse activation barrier. Investigation of species occurring during the formation of b(2) ions having an oxazolone structure indicates that y(1) ions can be formed also from intermediates previously thought to result in only b(2) ions. As the first step of the "b(x)-y(z)" pathway proposed here the extra proton must reach the nitrogen of the C-terminal amide bond. Attack of the N-terminal amide oxygen on the carbon center of the C-terminal amide bond results in formation of the oxazolone ring while the detaching G leaves the precursor ion. Under low-energy collision conditions the complex of protonated 2-aminomethyl-5-oxazolone and G can rearrange to form a proton-bonded dimer of these species. In such circumstances the extra proton is shared by the two monomers and dissociation of the dimer will be determined by the thermochemistry involved. Based on the "b(x)-y(z)" pathway one can easily explain the linear relationship between the logarithm of the y(1)/b(2) ion abundance ratio and the proton affinity of the C-terminal amino acid substituent for the series of H-Gly-Gly-Xxx-OH tripeptides where Xxx was varied (Morgan DG, Bursey MM. Org. Mass. Spectrom. 1994; 29: 354). The calculated energetics indicates that both y(1) and b(2) ions are formed with no reverse activation barrier on the "b(x)-y(z)" pathway.  相似文献   

4.
Protein identification and peptide sequencing by tandem mass spectrometry requires knowledge of how peptides fragment in the gas phase, specifically which bonds are broken and where the charge(s) resides in the products. For many peptides, cleavage at the amide bonds dominate, producing a series of ions that are designated b and y. For other peptides, enhanced cleavage occurs at just one or two amino acid residues. Surface-induced dissociation, along with gas-phase collision-induced dissociation performed under a variety of conditions, has been used to refine the general 'mobile proton' model and to determine how and why enhanced cleavages occur at aspartic acid residues and protonated histidine residues. Enhanced cleavage at acidic residues occurs when the charge is unavailable to the peptide backbone or the acidic side-chain. The acidic H of the side-chain then serves to initiate cleavage at the amide bond immediately C-terminal to Asp (or Glu), producing an anhydride. In contrast, enhanced cleavage occurs at His when the His side-chain is protonated, turning His into a weak acid that can initiate backbone cleavage by transferring a proton to the backbone. This allows the nucleophilic nitrogen of the His side-chain to attack and form a cyclic structure that is different from the 'typical' backbone cleavage structures.  相似文献   

5.
Collision-activated dissociation (CAD) of tryptic peptides is a cornerstone of mass spectrometry-based proteomics research. Principal component analysis of a database containing 15,000 high-resolution CAD mass spectra of gas-phase tryptic peptide dications revealed that they fall into two classes with a good separation between the classes. The main factor determining the class identity is the relative abundance of the peptide bond cleavage after the first two N-terminal residues. A possible scenario explaining this bifurcation involves trans- to cis-isomerization of the N-terminal peptide bond, which facilitates solvation of the N-terminal charge on the second backbone amide and formation of stable b(2) ions in the form of protonated diketopiperazines. Evidence supporting this scenario is derived from statistical analysis of the high-resolution CAD MS/MS database. It includes the observation of the strong deficit of a(3) ions and anomalous amino acid preferences for b(2) ion formation.  相似文献   

6.
Collision-induced dissociation (CID) of protonated YAGFL-NH2 leads to nondirect sequence fragment ions that cannot directly be derived from the primary peptide structure. Experimental and theoretical evidence indicate that primary fragmentation of the intact peptide leads to the linear YAGFLoxa b5 ion with a C-terminal oxazolone ring that is attacked by the N-terminal amino group to induce formation of a cyclic peptide b5 isomer. The latter can undergo various proton transfer reactions and opens up to form something other than the YAGFLoxa linear b5 isomer, leading to scrambling of sequence information in the CID of protonated YAGFL-NH2.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of the presence and position of a single beta-alanine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, epsilon-aminocaproic acid or 4-aminomethylbenzoic acid residue on the tendency to form b(n)+ -and y(n)+ -type product ions was determined using a group of protonated tetrapeptides with general sequence XAAG, AXAG and AAXG (where X refers to the position of amino acid substitution). The hypothesis tested was that the 'alternative' amino acids would influence product ion signal intensities by inhibiting or suppressing either the nucleophilic attack or key proton transfer steps by forcing the adoption of large cyclic intermediates or blocking cyclization altogether. We found that specific b ions are diminished or eliminated completely when betaA, gammaAbu, Cap or 4AMBz residues are positioned such that they should interfere with the intramolecular nucleophilic attack step. In addition, differences in the relative proton affinities of the alternative amino acids influence the competition between complementary b(n) and y(n) ions. For both the AXAG and the XAAG series of peptides, collision-induced dissociation (CID) generated prominent b ions despite potential inhibition or suppression of intramolecular proton migration by the betaA, gammaAbu, Cap or 4AMBz residues. The prominent appearance of b ions from the AXAG and XAAG peptide is noteworthy, and suggests either that proton migration occurs through larger, 'whole' peptide cyclic intermediates or that fragmentation proceeds through a population of [M+H]+ isomers that are initially protonated at amide O atoms.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The mechanism of the cleavage of protonated amide bonds of oligopeptides is discussed in detail exploring the major energetic, kinetic, and entropy factors that determine the accessibility of the b(x)-y(z) (Paizs, B.; Suhai, S. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2002, 16, 375) and "diketopiperazine" (Cordero, M. M.; Houser, J. J.; Wesdemiotis, C. Anal. Chem. 1993, 65, 1594) pathways. General considerations indicate that under low-energy collision conditions the majority of the sequence ions of protonated oligopeptides are formed on the b(x)-y(z) pathways which are energetically, kinetically, and entropically accessible. This is due to the facts that (1).the corresponding reactive configurations (amide N protonated species) can easily be formed during ion excitation, (2). most of the protonated nitrogens are stabilized by nearby amide oxygens making the spatial arrangement of the two amide bonds (the protonated and its N-terminal neighbor) involved in oxazolone formation entropically favored. On the other hand, formation of y ions on the diketopiperazine pathways is either kinetically or energetically or entropically controlled. The energetic control is due to the significant ring strain of small cyclic peptides that are co-formed with y ions (truncated protonated peptides) similar in size to the original peptide. The entropy control precludes formation of y ions much smaller than the original peptide since the attacking N-terminal amino group can rarely get close to the protonated amide bond buried by amide oxygens. Modeling the b(x)-y(z) pathways of protonated pentaalanine leads for the first time to semi-quantitative understanding of the tandem mass spectra of a protonated oligopeptide. Both the amide nitrogen protonated structures (reactive configurations for the amide bond cleavage) and the corresponding b(x)-y(z) transition structures are energetically more favored if protonation occurs closer to the C-terminus, e.g., considering these points the Ala(4)-Ala(5) amide bond is more favored than Ala(3)-Ala(4), and Ala(3)-Ala(4) is more favored than Ala(2)-Ala(3). This fact explains the increasing ion abundances observed for the b(2)/y(3), b(3)/y(2), and b(4)/y(1) ion pairs in the metastable ion and low-energy collision induced mass spectra (Yalcin, T.; Csizmadia, I. G.; Peterson, M. B.; Harrison, A. G. J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 1996, 7, 233) of protonated pentaalanine. A linear free-energy relationship is used to approximate the ratio of the b(x) and y(z) ions on the particular b(x)-y(z) pathways. Applying the necessary proton affinities such considerations satisfactorily explain for example dominance of the b(4) ion over y(1) and the similar b(3) and y(2) ion intensities observed for the metastable ion and low-energy collision induced mass spectra.  相似文献   

10.
The collision-induced dissociation (CID) fragmentation reactions of a variety of deprotonated peptides containing proline have been studied in detail using MS(2) and MS(3) experiments, deuterium labelling and accurate mass measurements when necessary. The [M--H--CO(2)](-) (a(2)) ion derived from H-Pro-Xxx-OH dipeptides shows an unusual fragmentation involving loss of C(2)H(4); this fragmentation reaction is not observed for larger peptides. The primary fragmentation reactions of deprotonated tripeptides with an N-terminal proline are formation of a(3) and y(1) ions. When proline is in the central position of tripeptides, a(3), y(2) and y(1) ions are the primary fragmentation products of [M--H](-), while when the proline is in the C-terminal position, a(3)and y(1) ions are the major primary products. In the latter case, the a(3) ion fragments primarily to the 'b(2) ion; further evidence is presented that the 'b(2) ions have a deprotonated oxazolone structure. Larger deprotonated peptides having at least two amino acid residues N-terminal to proline show a distinct preference for cleavage of the amide bond N-terminal to proline to form, mainly, the appropriate y ion. This proline effect is compared and contrasted with the similar proline effect observed in the fragmentation of protonated peptides containing proline.  相似文献   

11.
We report here the generation of gas-phase complexes containing Pd(II), a ligand (deprotonated alanine, A-), and/or N-terminus derivatized peptides containing histidine as one of the amino acids. The species were produced by electrospray ionization, and their gas-phase reactions were investigated using ion-trap tandem mass spectrometry. Pd(II) forms a stable diaqua complex in the gas phase of the formula, [Pd(A-) (H(2)O)(2)]+, (where A- = deprotonated alanine) along with ternary complexes containing A- and peptide. The collision-induced dissociation (CID) patterns of the binary and ternary complexes were investigated, and the dissociation patterns for the ternary complexes suggest that: (a) the imidazole ring of the histidine side group may be the intrinsic binding site of the metal ion, and (b) the peptides fragment primarily by cleavage of the amide bond to the C-terminal side of the histidine residues. These observations are in accord with previous solution-state studies in which Pd(II) was shown to cause hydrolysis of an amide bond of a peptide at the same position.  相似文献   

12.
The [M - H]- ions of a variety of di- to pentapeptides containing H or alkyl side chains have been prepared by electrospray ionization and low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID) of the deprotonated species carried out in the interface region between the atmospheric pressure source and the quadrupole mass analyzer. Using the nomenclature applied to the fragmentation of protonated peptides, deprotonated dipeptides fragment to give a2 ions (CO2 loss) and y1 ions, where the y1 ion has two fewer hydrogens than the y"1 ions formed from protonated peptides. Deprotonated tri- and tetrapeptides fragment to give primarily y1, c1, and "b2 ions, where the "b2 ion has two fewer hydrogens than the b2 ion observed for protonated peptides. More minor yields of y2, c2, and a2 ions also are observed. The a ion formed by loss of CO2 from the [M - H]- ion shows loss of the N-terminal residue for tripeptides and sequential loss of two amino acid residues from the N-terminus for tetrapeptides. The formation of c(n) ions and the sequential loss of N-terminus residues from the [M - H - CO2]- ion serves to sequence the peptide from the N-terminus, whereas the formation of y(n) ions serves to sequence the peptide from the C-terminus. It is concluded that low-energy CID of deprotonated peptides provides as much (or more) sequence information as does CID of protonated peptides, at least for those peptides containing H or alkyl side chains. Mechanistic aspects of the fragmentation reactions observed are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Various peptide modifications have been explored recently to facilitate the acquisition of sequence information. N-terminal sulfonation is an interesting modification because it allows unambiguous de novo sequencing of peptides, especially in conjunction with MALDI-PSD-TOF analysis; such modified peptide ions undergo fragmentation at energies lower than those required conventionally for unmodified peptide ions. In this study, we systematically investigated the fragmentation mechanisms of N-terminal sulfonated peptide ions prepared using two different N-terminal sulfonation reagents: 4-sulfophenyl isothiocyanate (SPITC) and 4-chlorosulfophenyl isocyanate (SPC). Collision-induced dissociation (CID) of the SPC-modified peptide ions produced a set of y-series ions that were more evenly distributed relative to those observed for the SPITC-modified peptides; y(n-1) ion peaks were consistently and significantly larger than the signals of the other y-ions. We experimentally investigated the differences between the dissociation energies of the SPITC- and SPC-modified peptide ions by comparing the MS/MS spectra of the complexes formed between the crown ether 18-crown-6 (CE) and the modified peptides. Upon CID, the complexes formed between 18-crown-6 ether and the protonated amino groups of C-terminal lysine residues underwent either peptide backbone fragmentation or complex dissociation. Although the crown ether complexes of the unmodified ([M + CE + 2H]2+) and SPC-modified ([M* + CE + 2H]2+) peptides underwent predominantly noncovalent complex dissociation upon CID, the low-energy dissociations of the crown ether complexes of the SPITC-modified peptides ([M' + CE + 2H]2+) unexpectedly resulted in peptide backbone fragmentations, along with a degree of complex dissociation. We performed quantum mechanical calculations to address the energetics of fragmentations observed for the modified peptides.  相似文献   

14.
The gas-phase structures of the protonated pentapeptide Leu-enkephalin and its main collision-induced dissociation (CID) product ions, b4 and a4, are investigated by means of infrared multiple-photon dissociation (IR-MPD) spectroscopy and detailed molecular mechanics and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Our combined experimental and theoretical approach allows accurate structural probing of the site of protonation and the rearrangement reactions that have taken place in CID. It is shown that the singly protonated Leu-enkephalin precursor is protonated on the N-terminus. The b4 fragment ion forms two types of structures: linear isomers with a C-terminal oxazolone ring, as well as cyclic peptide structures. For the former structure, two sites of proton attachment are observed, on the N-terminus and on the oxazolone ring nitrogen, as shown in a previous communication (Polfer, N. C.; Oomens, J.; Suhai, S.; Paizs, B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 17154-17155). Upon leaving the ions for longer radiative cooling delays in the ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) cell prior to IR spectroscopic investigation, one observes a gradual decrease in the relative population of oxazolone-protonated b4 and a corresponding increase in N-terminal-protonated b4. This experimentally demonstrates that the mobile proton is transferred between two sites in a gas-phase peptide ion and allows one to rationalize how the proton moves around the molecule in the dissociation process. The a4 fragment, which is predominantly formed via b4, is also confirmed to adopt two types of structures: linear imine-type structures, and cyclic structures; the former isomers are exclusively protonated on the N-terminus in sharp contrast to b4, where a mixture of protonation sites was found. The presence of cyclic b4 and a4 fragment ions is the first direct experimental proof that fully cyclic structures are formed in CID. These results suggest that their presence is significant, thus lending strong support to the recently discovered peptide fragmentation pathways (Harrison, A. G.; Young, A. B.; Bleiholder, B.; Suhai, S.; Paizs, B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 10364-10365) that result in scrambling of the amino acid sequence upon CID.  相似文献   

15.
Fragmentation of radical cationic peptides [R(G)(n-2)X(G)(7-n)]˙(+) and [R(G)(m-2)XG]˙(+) (X = Phe or Tyr; m = 2-5; n = 2-7) leads selectively to a(n)(+) product ions through in situ C(α)-C peptide backbone cleavage at the aromatic amino acid residues. In contrast, substituting the arginine residue with a less-basic lysine residue, forming [K(G)(n-2)X(G)(7-n)]˙(+) (X = Phe or Tyr; n = 2-7) analogs, generates abundant b-y product ions; no site-selective C(α)-C peptide bond cleavage was observed. Studying the prototypical radical cationic tripeptides [RFG]˙(+) and [KFG]˙(+) using low-energy collision-induced dissociation and density functional theory, we have examined the influence of the basicity of the N-terminal amino acid residue on the competition between the isomerization and dissociation channels, particularly the selective C(α)-C bond cleavage viaβ-hydrogen atom migration. The dissociation barriers for the formation of a(2)(+) ions from [RFG]˙(+) and [KFG]˙(+)via their β-radical isomers are comparable (33.1 and 35.0 kcal mol(-1), respectively); the dissociation barrier for the charge-induced formation of the [b(2)- H]˙(+) radical cation from [RFG]˙(+)via its α-radical isomer (39.8 kcal mol(-1)) was considerably higher than that from [KFG]˙(+) (27.2 kcal mol(-1)). Thus, the basic arginine residue sequesters the mobile proton to promote the charge-remote selective C(α)-C bond cleavage by energetically hindering the competing charge-induced pathways.  相似文献   

16.
The elimination of carbon monoxide and water from a series of protonated dipeptides, [XxxYyy + H](+), is investigated by tandem mass spectrometry experiments and density functional theory. The combined results show that CO loss occurs on the a(1)-y(1) pathway, which begins by rearrangement of the added proton to the amide N-atom and creates the proton-bound dimer of an amino acid (Yyy) and an imine (that from Xxx residue). The loss of H(2)O is initiated from a tautomer in which the added proton has migrated to the hydroxyl group of the C-terminus, thereby promoting the formation of an ion with protonated oxazolone structure (a nominal b(2) ion). The highest yields of [XxxYyy + H - CO](+) and [XxxYyy + H - H(2)O](+) are observed at threshold energies. As the internal energy of the protonated dipeptides increases, these primary products are depleted by consecutive dissociations yielding mostly backbone fragments. Specifically, [XxxYyy + H - CO](+) decomposes to y(1) (protonated Yyy) and a(1) (immonium ion of Xxx residue), while [XxxYyy + H - H(2)O](+) produces a(2) and the immonium ions of residues Xxx (a(1)) and Yyy ("internal" immonium ion). Water loss takes place more efficiently when the more basic residue is at the C-terminal position. Increasing the basicity of the N-terminal residue enhances the extent of CO versus H(2)O loss and introduces the competitive elimination of NH(3). The dissociations leading to eliminations of small neutrals (CO, H(2)O, etc.) generally proceed over transition states that lie higher in energy than the corresponding dissociation products. The excess energy is disposed of either in translational or rovibrational modes of the products, depending on the stability of the incipient noncovalent assemblies emerging during the cleavage of the small neutrals.  相似文献   

17.
The gas-phase fragmentation mechanisms of small models for peptides containing intermolecular disulfide links have been studied using a combination of tandem mass spectrometry experiments, isotopic labeling, structural labeling, accurate mass measurements of product ions, and theoretical calculations (at the MP2/6-311 + G(2d,p)//B3LYP/3-21G(d) level of theory). Cystine and its C-terminal derivatives were observed to fragment via a range of pathways, including loss of neutral molecules, amide bond cleavage, and S-S and C-S bond cleavages. Various mechanisms were considered to rationalize S-S and C-S bond cleavage processes, including charge directed neighboring group processes and nonmobile proton salt bridge mechanism. Three low-energy fragmentation pathways were identified from theoretical calculations on cystine N-methyl amide: (1) S-S bond cleavage dominated by a neighboring group process involving the C-terminal amide N to form either a protonated cysteine derivative or protonated sulfenyl amide product ion (44.3 kcal mol(-1)); (2) C-S bond cleavage via a salt bridge mechanism, involving abstraction of the alpha-hydrogen by the N-terminal amino group to form a protonated thiocysteine derivative (35.0 kcal mol(-1)); and (3) C-S bond cleavage via a Grob-like fragmentation process in which the nucleophilic N-terminal amino group forms a protonated dithiazolidine (57.9 kcal mol(-1)). Interestingly, C-S bond cleavage by neighboring group processes have high activation barriers (63.1 kcal mol(-1)) and are thus not expected to be accessible during low-energy CID experiments. In comparison to the energetics of simple amide bond cleavage, these S-S and C-S bond cleavage reactions are higher in energy, which helps rationalize why bond cleavage processes involving the disulfide bond are rarely observed for low-energy CID of peptides with mobile proton(s) containing intermolecular disulfide bonds. On the other hand, the absence of a mobile proton appears to "switch on" disulfide bond cleavage reactions, which can be rationalized by the salt bridge mechanism. This potentially has important ramifications in explaining the prevalence of disulfide bond cleavage in singly protonated peptides under MALDI conditions.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, the fragmentation of gas-phase protonated Angiotensin II is investigated using electrospray ionization (ESI), Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR), and mass spectrometry (MS) with a laser cleavage infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) technique. The experimental results show that the spectra peaks for the photoproducts are y2/b6- and y7-type ions, corresponding to the cleavage of His-Pro and Asp-Arg in the parent amino acid sequence. The fragmentation of the peptide under collision-free vacuum conditions is modeled using molecular dynamics simulations (MD). The binding energy for the peptide bonds (C'-N bond) of Angiotensin II is estimated from ab initio calculations. The calculations are directed at predicting experimental measurements of the product ions from the photodissociation of the peptide. The product distributions simulated by the MD dissociation trajectories include predominantly y7/b1 and y2/b6 pair ions.  相似文献   

19.
A unique collision-induced dissociation pattern was observed for protonated polyproline peptides of length n in which y(n-2) and/or y(n-4) ions were formed in much higher abundance than any other product ions. Cleavage occurs only at every other amide bond, such that product ions are formed only from the losses of even numbers of proline residues. Exclusive losses of even numbers of proline residues were not observed from sodiated peptides. Further study of the tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) patterns of protonated proline-rich peptides showed that the substitution of alanine in the second position of polyproline peptides did not prevent the dominant formation of y(n-2) and y(n-4) ions. The loss of ProAla to form the y(8) ion from (ProAlaPro(8)NH(2)+H)(+) was as abundant as the loss of ProPro from (Pro(10)NH(2)+H)(+). However, modification of the peptides that presumably affected the location of the proton on the peptide did alter the MS/MS spectra. Pro(10) and Pro(5) with blocked N-termini or with arginine substituted for the first proline residue did not form abundant y(n-2) or y(n-4) ions. MS(3) and double resonance experiments showed that dissociation of intermediate y(n) product ions can produce y(n-2) ions, but are not necessary dissociation pathway intermediates. This analysis suggests that the ionizing proton must be located at the N-terminus for the peptide ion to dissociate in this manner.  相似文献   

20.
During characterization of some peptides (linear precursors of the cyclic peptides showing potential to be anticancer drugs) in an ion trap, it was noted that many internal amino acid residues could be lost from singly charged b ions. The phenomenon was not obvious at the first stage of collisionally activated decomposition (CAD), but was apparent at multiple stages of CAD. The unique fragmentation consisting of multiple steps is induced by a cyclization reaction of b ions, the mechanism of which has been probed by experiments of N-acetylation, MS(n), rearranged-ion design, and activation-time adjustment. The fragmentation of synthetic cyclic peptides demonstrates that a cyclic peptide intermediate (CPI) formed by b ion cyclization exhibits the same fragmentation pattern as a protonated cyclic peptide. Although no rules for the cyclization reaction were discerned in the experiments of peptide modification, the fragmentations of a number of b ions indicate that the "Pro and Asn/Gln effects" can influence ring openings of CPIs. In addition, large-scale losses of internal residues from different positions of a-type ions have been observed when pure helium was used as collision gas. The fragmentation is initiated by a cyclization reaction forming an a-type ion CPI. This CPI with a fixed-charge structure cannot be influenced by the "Pro effect", causing a selective ring opening at the amide bond Pro-Xxx rather than Xxx-Pro. With the knowledge of the unique fragmentations leading to internal residue losses, the misidentification of fragments and sequences of peptides may be avoided.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号