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1.
The effect of site and frequency of phosphorylation on the electron capture dissociation of peptide ions has been investigated. The ECD of a suite of synthetic peptides (APLSFRGSLPKSYVK; one unmodified, three singly-phosphorylated, three-doubly phosphorylated, and one triply-phosphorylated); two tryptic phosphopeptides (YKVPQLEIVPN(p)SAEER, alpha-casein and FQ(p)SEEQQQTEDELQDK, beta-casein) and their unmodified counterparts, were determined over a range of ECD cathode potentials. The results show that, for doubly-charged precursor ions, the presence of phosphorylation has a deleterious effect on ECD sequence coverage. The fragmentation patterns observed suggest that for peptides with multiple basic residues, the phospho-groups exist in their deprotonated form and form salt-bridges with protonated amino acid side chains. The fragmentation observed for the acidic tryptic peptides suggested the presence of noncovalent interactions, which were perturbed on phosphorylation. Increasing the ECD electron energy significantly improves sequence coverage. Alternatively, improved sequence coverage can be achieved by performing ECD on triply-charged precursor ions. The findings are important for the understanding of gas-phase fragmentation of phosphopeptides.  相似文献   

2.
In the era of complete genome sequences, biochemical and medical research will focus more on the dynamic proteome of a cell. Regulation of proteins by post-translational modifications, which are not determined by the gene sequence, are already intensively studied. One example is phosphorylation of serines and threonines, probably the single most common cellular regulatory mechanism. In this paper we describe the sequencing of mono- and bisphosphorylated peptides, including identification of the phosphorylation sites, by post-source decay (PSD) in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. In addition to dephosphorylation of the parent ions, we studied the influence of the phosphate group on the fragmentation of peptides. Generally, peptides phosphorylated on serine and threonine residues displayed no difference in their fragmentation patterns. The intensities of the resulting fragment ion signals depend only on the peptide sequence and not on either the phosphorylated amino acid or its position in the peptide chain. Phosphorylation increased the bond cleavage C-terminal to the phosphorylation site more than 10-fold, resulting in abundant signals, which typically dominated the PSD spectra. The produced C-terminally phosphorylated b-type fragment ions showed characteristic dephosphorylated fragment ions b(n) -H(3)PO(4) (-98 Da) and b(n) -HPO(3) (-80 Da) of higher abundances than the phosphorylated fragment ion. As a second layer to identify the phosphorylation site, all internally phosphorylated fragment ions were accompanied by minor, but always detectable, signals of the dephosphorylated fragment ions. Interpretation of PSD spectra of phosphopeptides was not more complicated than for unphosphorylated peptides, despite the increased number of obtained fragment ion signals.  相似文献   

3.
Fragmentation of phosphorylated Tau peptides in matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) has been investigated.According to the post-source decay (PSD) in MALDI-TOF-MS, there are two different patterns of cleavage in phosphopeptides, which can be used to determine the phosphorylated site in peptides.In the synthetic tau peptides, the fragmentation at proline residue occurs strongly and this is useful to determine the structure of tau peptides.  相似文献   

4.
A method is described for identifying serine phosphorylation sites in proteins, based on conventional (32)P labeling followed by electrophoretic separation, 'in-gel' digestion with a protease, peptide extraction, reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic separation and collection and off-line analysis of the radioactive fractions by nanospray ion trap mass spectrometry. The method was successfully applied to the identification of three phosphorylation sites in two proteins which were subjected to in vitro phosphorylation under physiological conditions. Different combinations of the various scanning modes of the ion trap, including high-resolution, multiple subfragmentation (or MS(n)) and fast scan analysis, were employed to identify the phosphopeptides, determine their sequence and localize the exact site of phosphorylation. 'Blind' fragmentation using fast scans was used to analyze a phosphopeptide which was undetectable in other scanning modes. The sequence, phosphorylation site and double cysteine modification of the potassium adduct of a peptide containing 35 residues were also determined by multiple fragmentation. The results not only support the validity of the proposed method for routine identification of phosphorylation sites, but also demonstrate the exceptional capability of off-line ion trap mass spectrometry in combination with nanospray ionization for performing very detailed studies on the structure of peptides.  相似文献   

5.
The radical ion chemistry of a suite of S-nitrosopeptides has been investigated. Doubly and triply-protonated ions of peptides NYCGLPGEYWLGNDK, NYCGLPGEYWLGNDR, NYCGLPGERWLGNDR, NACGAPGEKWAGNDK, NYCGLPGEKYLGNDK, NYGLPGCEKWYGNDK and NYGLPGEKWYGCNDK were subjected to electron capture dissociation (ECD), and collision-induced dissociation (CID). The peptide sequences were selected such that the effect of the site of S-nitrosylation, the nature and position of the basic amino acid residues, and the nature of the other amino acid side chains, could be interrogated. The ECD mass spectra were dominated by a peak corresponding to loss of ?NO from the charge-reduced precursor, which can be explained by a modified Utah-Washington mechanism. Some backbone fragmentation in which the nitrosyl modification was preserved was also observed in the ECD of some peptides. Molecular dynamics simulations of peptide ion structure suggest that the ECD behavior was dependent on the surface accessibility of the protonated residue. CID of the S-nitrosylated peptides resulted in homolysis of the S?CN bond to form a long-lived radical with loss of ?NO. The radical peptide ions were isolated and subjected to ECD and CID. ECD of the radical peptide ions provided an interesting comparison to ECD of the unmodified peptides. The dominant process was electron capture without further dissociation (ECnoD). CID of the radical peptide ions resulted in cysteine, leucine, and asparagine side chain losses, and radical-induced backbone fragmentation at tryptophan, tyrosine, and asparagine residues, in addition to charge-directed backbone fragmentation.  相似文献   

6.
Electron capture dissociation (ECD) of a series of five residue peptides led to the observation that these small peptides did not lead to the formation of the usual c/z ECD fragments, but to a, b, y, and w fragments. In order to determine how general this behavior is for small sized peptides, the effect of peptide size on ECD fragments using a complete set of ECD spectra from the SwedECD spectra database was examined. Analysis of the database shows that b and w fragments are favored for small peptide sizes and that average fragment size shows a linear relationship to parent peptide size for most fragment types. From these data, it appears that most of the w fragments are not secondary fragments of the major z ions, in sharp contrast with the proposed mechanism leading to these ions. These data also show that c fragment distributions depend strongly on the nature of C-terminal residue basic site: arginine leads to loss of short neutral fragments, whereas lysine leads to loss of longer neutral fragments. It also appears that b ions might be produced by two different mechanisms depending on the parent peptide size. A model for the fragmentation pathways in competition is proposed. These relationships between average fragment size and parent peptide size could be further exploited also for CID fragment spectra and could be included in fragmentation prediction algorithms.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Zhang D  Liu H  Zhang S  Chen X  Li S  Zhang C  Hu X  Bi K  Chen X  Jiang Y 《Talanta》2011,84(3):614-622
An effective method for peptide sequencing based on phosphorylation strategy and UPLC-MS/MS is proposed in this report. A phosphorylation reaction was carried out by mixing model peptide solution with phosphorylation solution. UPLC-MS/MS was used to analyze and characterize the phosphorylated peptides in the optimized ramp collision energy mode. The results illustrated that this phosphorylation approach significantly strengthened the signal intensity of both a1 and b series ions of the spectra of the modified peptides. It also can be used to effectively distinguish glutamine (Q) and lysine (K) residues in peptides. The feasibility of this approach was validated by analyzing the trypsin-digested BSA. Data suggested that this proposed method could be a useful tool for the de novo peptide sequencing in proteome research.  相似文献   

9.
The rules for product ion formation in electron capture dissociation (ECD) mass spectrometry of peptides and proteins remain unclear. Random backbone cleavage probability and the nonspecific nature of ECD toward amino acid sequence have been reported, contrary to preferential channels of fragmentation in slow heating-based tandem mass spectrometry. Here we demonstrate that for amphipathic peptides and proteins, modulation of ECD product ion abundance (PIA) along the sequence is pronounced. Moreover, because of the specific primary (and presumably secondary) structure of amphipathic peptides, PIA in ECD demonstrates a clear and reproducible periodic sequence distribution. On the one hand, the period of ECD PIA corresponds to periodic distribution of spatially separated hydrophobic and hydrophilic domains within the peptide primary sequence. On the other hand, the same period correlates with secondary structure units, such as α-helical turns, known for solution-phase structure. Based on a number of examples, we formulate a set of characteristic features for ECD of amphipathic peptides and proteins: (1) periodic distribution of PIA is observed and is reproducible in a wide range of ECD parameters and on different experimental platforms; (2) local maxima of PIA are not necessarily located near the charged site; (3) ion activation before ECD not only extends product ion sequence coverage but also preserves ion yield modulation; (4) the most efficient cleavage (e.g. global maximum of ECD PIA distribution) can be remote from the charged site; (5) the number and location of PIA maxima correlate with amino acid hydrophobicity maxima generally to within a single amino acid displacement; and (6) preferential cleavage sites follow a selected hydrogen spine in an α-helical peptide segment. Presently proposed novel insights into ECD behavior are important for advancing understanding of the ECD mechanism, particularly the role of peptide sequence on PIA. An improved ECD model could facilitate protein sequencing and improve identification of unknown proteins in proteomics technologies. In structural biology, the periodic/preferential product ion yield in ECD of α-helical structures potentially opens the way toward de novo site-specific secondary structure determination of peptides and proteins in the gas phase and its correlation with solution-phase structure.  相似文献   

10.
The electron capture dissociation (ECD) of peptide‐derived Amadori products has been successfully applied for their sequencing. In contrast to the collision induced dissociation (CID), based on the vibrational excitation of peptides, the ECD method does not produce ions formed by fragmentation of the hexose moiety, that facilitates interpretation of the obtained spectra. The fragmentation spectrum is dominated by cn and z·n ions, providing the sufficient information for sequencing of peptides and establishing the location of glycated Lys residues in the peptide chain. The ECD experiments were conducted on a series of synthetic peptides and unseparated digests of glycated ubiquitin. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Peptide modification by a quaternary ammonium group containing a permanent positive charge is a promising method of increasing the ionization efficiency of the analyzed compounds, making ultra-sensitive detection even at the attomolar level possible. Charge-derivatized peptides may undergo both charge remote (ChR) and charge-directed (ChD) fragmentation. A series of model peptide conjugates derivatized with N,N,N-triethyloammonium (TEA), 1-azoniabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (ABCO), 2,4,6-triphenylopyridinium (TPP) and tris(2,4,6-trimetoxyphenylo)phosphonium (TMPP) groups were analyzed by their fragmentation pathways both in collision-induced dissociation (CID) and electron-capture dissociation (ECD) mode. The effect of the fixed-charge tag type and peptide sequence on the fragmentation pathways was investigated. We found that the aspartic acid effect plays a crucial role in the CID fragmentation of TPP and TEA peptide conjugates whereas it was not resolved for the peptides derivatized with the phosphonium group. ECD spectra are mostly dominated by cn ions. ECD fragmentation of TMPP-modified peptides results in the formation of intense fragments derived from this fixed-charge tag, which may serve as reporter ion.  相似文献   

12.
Normal (non-enhanced) Raman spectroscopy is used to determine the site of phosphorylation on a 13-residue peptide whose sequence derives from the cellular protein pp60(c-src) (protein tyrosine kinase). Raman spectra of serine, threonine and tyrosine amino acids and their phosphorylated derivatives are used to aid in the interpretation of peptide spectra. The purity of the synthetic peptides are confirmed by mass spectroscopy. Peptide Raman measurements are performed using the recently reported drop-coating deposition Raman (DCDR) method, followed by Savistky-Golay second derivative (SGSD) pre-processing and multivariate spectral classification using partial least squares (PLS) discriminant analysis. Leave-one-out training/testing results are displayed using a PLS psuedo-probability score plot and shown to facilitate error-free spectral determination of the site of phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of peptide dication charge location on electron capture dissociation (ECD) fragmentation pattern is investigated. ECD fragmentation patterns are compared for peptides with amide and free acid C-terminal groups. ECD of free acid compared with C-terminally amidated peptides with basic residues near the N-terminus demonstrates increased formation of a-type ions. Similarly, ECD of free acid compared with C-terminally amidated peptides with basic residues near the C-terminus exhibits increased formation of y-type ions. Alteration of the peptide sequence to inhibit the formation of charged side chains (i.e., amino acid substitution and acetylation) provides further evidence for charge location effect on ECD. We propose that formation of zwitterionic peptide structures increases the likelihood of amide nitrogen protonation (versus basic side chains), which is responsible for the increase in a- and y-type ion formation.  相似文献   

14.
Electron detachment dissociation (EDD) of peptide poly-anions is gentle towards post-translational modifications (PTMs) and produces predictable and interpretable fragment ion types (a., x ions). However, EDD is considered an inefficient fragmentation technique and has not yet been implemented in large-scale peptide characterization strategies. We successfully increased the EDD fragmentation efficiency (up to 9%), and demonstrate for the first time the utility of EDD-MS/MS in liquid chromatography time-scale experiments. Peptides and phosphopeptides were analyzed in both positive- and negative-ion mode using electron capture/transfer dissociation (ECD/ETD) and EDD in comparison. Using approximately 1 pmol of a BSA tryptic digest, LC-EDD-MS/MS sequenced 14 peptides (27% aa sequence coverage) and LC-ECD-MS/MS sequenced 19 peptides (39% aa sequence coverage). Seven peptides (18% aa sequence coverage) were sequenced by both EDD and ECD. The relative small overlap of identified BSA peptides demonstrates the complementarity of the two dissociation modes. Phosphopeptide mixtures from three trypsin-digested phosphoproteins were subjected to LC-EDD-MS/MS resulting in the identification of five phospho-peptides. Of those, one was not found in a previous study using a similar sample and LC-ETD-MS/MS in the positive-ion mode. In this study, the ECD fragmentation efficiency (15.7% av.) was superior to the EDD fragmentation efficiency (3.6% av.). However, given the increase in amino acid sequence coverage and extended PTM characterization the new regime of EDD in combination with other ion-electron fragmentation techniques in the positive-ion mode is a step towards a more comprehensive strategy of analysis in proteome research.  相似文献   

15.
We report the implementation of an all-atom Brownian dynamics simulation model of peptides using the constraint algorithm LINCS. The algorithm has been added as a part of UHBD. It uses adaptive time steps to achieve a balance between computational speed and stability. The algorithm was applied to study the effect of phosphorylation on the conformational preference of the peptide Gly-Ser-Ser-Ser. We find that the middle serine residue experiences considerable conformational change from the C(7eq) to the alpha(R) structure upon phosphorylation. NMR (3)J coupling constants were also computed from the Brownian trajectories using the Karplus equation. The calculated (3)J results agree reasonably well with experimental data for phosphorylated peptide but less so for doubly charged phosphorylated one.  相似文献   

16.
Previously, we have indicated (Cooper, H.J., et al. Int. J. Mass Spectrom., 2003, 228, 723-728) that electron capture dissociation (ECD) of the doubly protonated peptides, Leu(4)-Sar-Leu(3)-Lys-OH, Leu(4)-Ala-Leu(3)-Lys-OH, Gly(4)-Sar-Gly(3)-Lys-NH(2), and Gly(3)-Pro-Sar-Gly(3)-Lys-NH(2), results in abundant b ions, which derive from fragmentation of backbone amide bonds, a nonstandard fragmentation channel in ECD. The instrumental conditions were such that the possibility that collision-induced dissociation processes were contributing to the observed spectra was eliminated. In a separate study (Fung, Y.M.E., et al. Eur. J. Mass Spectrom., 2004, 10, 449-457. ECD of peptides Arg-(Gly)(n)-Xxx-(Gly)(n)-Arg, where Xxx is the amino acid of interest, did not result in b ions. The variation in ECD observed for strikingly similar peptides suggests that the nature of the charge carrier (Arg or Lys) is instrumental in governing the fragmentation channels. Here, we describe the ECD behavior of a suite of model peptides designed such that the nature and position of the charge carrier could be probed. The results suggest that the presence of b ions in ECD spectra is a consequence of both charge carrier and peptide structure. Possible mechanisms for the formation of b ions following electron capture are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Electron capture dissociation (ECD) and collision-induced dissociation (CID), the two complementary fragmentation techniques, are demonstrated to be effective in the detection and localization of the methionine sulfoxide [Met(O)] residues in peptides using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometry. The presence of Met(O) can be easily recognized in the low-energy CID spectrum showing the characteristic loss of methanesulfenic acid (CH(3)SOH, 64 Da) from the side chain of Met(O). The position of Met(O) can then be localized by ECD which is capable of providing extensive peptide backbone fragmentation without detaching the labile Met(O) side chain. We studied CID and ECD of several Met(O)-containing peptides that included the 44-residue human growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF) and the human atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP). The distinction and complementarity of the two fragmentation techniques were particularly remarkable in their effects on ANP, a disulfide bond-containing peptide. While the predominant fragmentation pathway in CID of ANP was the loss of CH(3)SOH (64 Da) from the molecular ion, ECD of ANP resulted in many sequence-informative products, including those from cleavages within the disulfide-bonded cyclic structure, to allow for the direct localization of Met(O) without the typical procedures for disulfide bond reduction followed by [bond]SH alkylation.  相似文献   

18.
This article discusses the features of a newly developed matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization quadrupole/time-of-flight (MALDI-QqTOF) mass spectrometer that is useful in the analysis of phosphorylated peptides. Aliquots of beta-casein, a commonly used phosphorylated protein standard, were digested with trypsin directly on a non-porous polyurethane membrane used as sample support in MALDI-QqTOF mass spectrometry (MS) experiments. Although a complete peptide map was obtained, it was difficult to obtain sequence information for some of the tryptic fragments, in particular T1-2, which bears four phosphate groups and is thus difficult to ionize in positive mode. This article focuses on the sequencing of this particular fragment by comparing MS/MS spectra obtained using different precursor ions. These precursors associated with T1-2 were [M + H](+), [M + H](2+), and [M + H - nH(3)PO(4)](+) ions. Typically, phosphorylated ions showed facile unimolecular losses of phosphoric acid moieties, and produced limited backbone fragmentation. The abundance of [M + H](2+) ions of T1-2 in the full mass spectrum was low relative to that of [M + H](+). [M + H - 4H(3)PO(4)](+) ions as MS/MS precursors underwent backbone fragmentations, with phosphoserine residues transformed into dehydroalanines or serines. Unusual b + 18 u fragments were observed, although only for segments with previously phosphorylated serines. These partly interfered with c-ions, and were noticeable due to overlapping isotopic envelopes. It was possible to establish the sequence of phosphorylated tryptic fragment T1-2 and the location of phosphate groups using the mass of dehydroalanine residues (69 Da) and b + 18 u fragments as markers. All MS and MS/MS spectra obtained with fully phosphorylated beta-casein were compared with spectra acquired with dephosphorylated beta-casein obtained commercially. These comparisons helped assess the spectral differences caused by the presence of phosphate groups. Also, they highlighted the potential usefulness of conducting dephosphorylation directly on the probe prior to MALDI analysis in future studies.  相似文献   

19.
The analytical utility of the electron capture dissociation (ECD) technique, developed by McLafferty and co-workers, has substantially improved peptide and protein characterization using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS). The limitations of the first ECD implementations on commercial instruments were eliminated by the employment of low-energy electron-injection systems based on indirectly heated dispenser cathodes. In particular, the ECD rate and reliability were greatly increased, enabling the combination of ECD/FTICR-MS with on-line liquid separation techniques. Further technique development allowed the combination of two rapid fragmentation techniques, high-rate ECD and infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD), in a single experimental configuration. Simultaneous and consecutive irradiations of trapped ions with electrons and photons extended the possibilities for ion activation/dissociation and led to improved peptide and protein characterization. The application of high-rate ECD/FTICR-MS has demonstrated its power and unique capabilities in top-down sequencing of peptides and proteins, including characterization of post-translational modifications, improved sequencing of peptides with multiple disulfide bridges and secondary fragmentation (w-ion formation). Analysis of peptide mixtures has been accomplished using high-rate ECD in bottom-up mass spectrometry based on mixture separation by liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis. This paper summarizes the current impact of high-rate ECD/FTICR-MS for top-down and bottom-up mass spectrometry of peptides and 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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