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1.
Collision-induced dissociation of singly charged peptide ions produced by resonant excitation in a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) ion trap mass spectrometer yields relatively low complexity MS/MS spectra that exhibit highly preferential fragmentation, typically occurring adjacent to aspartyl, glutamyl, and prolyl residues. Although these spectra have proven to be of considerable utility for database-driven protein identification, they have generally been considered to contain insufficient information to be useful for extensive de novo sequencing. Here, we report a procedure for de novo sequencing of peptides that uses MS/MS data generated by an in-house assembled MALDI-quadrupole-ion trap mass spectrometer (Krutchinsky, Kalkum, and Chait Anal. Chem. 2001, 73, 5066-5077). Peptide sequences of up 14 amino acid residues in length have been deduced from digests of proteins separated by SDS-PAGE. Key to the success of the current procedure is an ability to obtain MS/MS spectra with high signal-to-noise ratios and to efficiently detect relatively low abundance fragment ions that result from the less favorable fragmentation pathways. The high signal-to-noise ratio yields sufficiently accurate mass differences to allow unambiguous amino acid sequence assignments (with a few exceptions), and the efficient detection of low abundance fragment ions allows continuous reads through moderately long stretches of sequence. Finally, we show how the aforementioned preferential cleavage property of singly charged ions can be used to facilitate the de novo sequencing process.  相似文献   

2.
We report the application of nanoelectrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (nES-MS/MS) and capillary LC/microelectrospray MS/MS (cLC/&mgr;ES-MS/MS) for sequencing sulfonic acid derivatized tryptic peptides. These derivatives were specifically prepared to facilitate low-energy charge-site-initiated fragmentation of C-terminal arginine-containing peptides, and to enhance the selective detection of a single series of y-type fragment ions. Both singly and doubly protonated peptides were analyzed by MS/MS and the results were compared with those from their derivatized counterparts. Model peptides and peptides from tryptic digests of gel-isolated proteins were analyzed. Derivatized singly protonated peptides fragment in the same way by nES-MS/MS as they do by post-source decay matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (PSD-MALDI-MS). They produce fragment ion spectra dominated by y-ions, and the simplified spectra are readily interpreted de novo. Doubly protonated peptides fragment in much the same way as their non-derivatized doubly protonated counterparts. The fragmentation of doubly protonated derivatives is especially useful for sequencing peptides that possess a proline residue near the N-terminus of the molecule. The singly protonated forms of these proline-containing derivatives often show enhanced fragmentation on the N-terminal side of the proline and considerably reduced fragmentation on the C-terminal side. In addition, sulfonic acid derivatization increases the in-source fragmentation of arginine-containing peptides. This could be useful for sequence verification and sequence tagging for use in single stage mass spectrometry. Copyright 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Vitamin K-dependent carboxylation of glutamic acid (Glu) residues into γ-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) is a post-translational modification essential for normal protein activity of, for example, proteins involved in the blood coagulation system. These proteins may contain as many as 12 sites for γ-carboxylation within a protein sequence of 45 amino acid residues. In the biopharmaceutical industry, powerful analytical techniques are required for identification and localization of modified sites. We here present comparatively easy and rapid methods for studies of Gla-containing proteins using recent technology. The performances of two mass spectrometric fragmentation techniques, collision-induced dissociation (CID) and electron transfer dissociation (ETD), were evaluated with respect to γ-carboxylated peptides, applying on-line LC-ion trap MS. ETD MS has so far not been reported for Gla-containing peptides and the applicability of CID for heavily γ-carboxylated proteins has not been evaluated. The anticoagulant protein, protein C, containing nine Gla-sites, was chosen as a model protein. After tryptic digestion, three peptides containing Gla-residues were detected by MS; a 1.2 kDa fragment containing two Gla-residues, a 4.5 kDa peptide containing seven residues and also the 5.6 kDa tryptic peptides containing all nine Gla-residues. Regarding the shortest peptide, both CID and ETD provided extensive peptide sequencing. For the larger peptides, fragmentation by CID resulted in loss of the 44 Da CO(2)-group, while little additional fragmentation of the peptide chain was observed. In contrast, ETD resulted in comprehensive fragmentation of the peptide backbone. The study demonstrates that the combination of both techniques would be beneficial and complementary for investigation of γ-carboxylated proteins and peptides.  相似文献   

6.
In peptide sequencing experiments involving a single step tandem mass acquisition, leucine and isoleucine are indistinguishable because both are characterized by a 113 Da mass difference from the other peptide fragments in the MS2 spectrum. In this work, we propose a new method to distinguish between these two amino acids in consecutive MSn experiments, exploiting a gas-phase fragmentation of isoleucine that leads to a diagnostic 69 Da ion. We used this method to assess the Leu/Ile residues of several synthetic peptides. The procedure was then tested on a tryptic digest of myoglobin, assigning the correct amino acid in the majority of the peptides. This work was performed with an old and low-resolution instrument, thus demonstrating that our method is suitable for a wide number of ion trap mass spectrometers, not necessarily expensive or up-to-date.  相似文献   

7.
An algorithm for interpretation of product ion spectra of peptides generated from ion trap mass spectrometry is developed for de novo amino acid sequencing of peptides for the purpose of protein identification. It is based on a multi-pass analysis of product ion data using a rigorous data extraction and sequence interpretation protocol in the initial pass. The extraction/interpretation algorithm becomes more relaxed in subsequent passes, considering more of the fragment ions, and potentially more sequence candidates. The possible peptide sequences generated by the algorithm are scored according to those sequences which best explain the fragment ion spectrum. These sequences are searched against a protein database using a BLAST search engine to find likely protein candidates. The method is also suitable for locating and determining protein modifications, and can be applied to de novo interpretation of peptide fragment ions in the tandem mass (MS/MS) spectrum produced from a mixture of two peptides having similar nominal mass, but different sequences. Using a known protein, bovine serum albumin, as an example, it is illustrated that this method is rapid and efficient for MS/MS spectral interpretation. This method combined with BLAST programs is then applied to search homologies and to generate information on post-translational modifications of an unknown protein isolated from shark cartilage that does not have a complete genome or proteome database.  相似文献   

8.
A one-step phosphoryl derivatization method has been used in a peptide sequencing procedure for electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). The sodiated derivatized peptides exhibit very simple dissociation patterns, in which two kinds of fragment ions, [b(n) + OH + Na]+ and [a(n) + Na]+, are formed. Since the amino acid residues are lost sequentially from the C-terminus, peptide sequences can be identified easily. The fragmentation efficiency of peptides increased as a result of the phosphorylation, and also provided peaks of useful intensity at lower m/z. A peptide with lysine at the C-terminus was derivatized and analyzed by ESI-MS/MS. Similar mass spectra, from which the sequence could be read out, were obtained. This is a novel derivatization method yielding neutral derivatives that should be suitable for peptide sequencing by LC/ESI-MS/MS.  相似文献   

9.
Improving the sensitivity of detection and fragmentation of peptides to provide reliable sequencing of peptides is an important goal of mass spectrometric analysis. Peptides derivatized by bicyclic quaternary ammonium ionization tags: 1‐azabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (ABCO) or 1,4‐diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO), are characterized by an increased detection sensitivity in electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI‐MS) and longer retention times on the reverse‐phase (RP) chromatography columns. The improvement of the detection limit was observed even for peptides dissolved in 10 mM NaCl. Collision‐induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry of quaternary ammonium salts derivatives of peptides showed dominant a‐ and b‐type ions, allowing facile sequencing of peptides. The bicyclic ionization tags are stable in collision‐induced dissociation experiments, and the resulted fragmentation pattern is not significantly influenced by either acidic or basic amino acid residues in the peptide sequence. Obtained results indicate the general usefulness of the bicyclic quaternary ammonium ionization tags for ESI‐MS/MS sequencing of peptides. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI), Peptide Mass Fingerprinting (PMF) and MALDI-MS/MS ion search (using MASCOT) have become the preferred methods for high-throughput identification of proteins. Unfortunately, PMF can be ambiguous, mainly when the genome of the organism under investigation is unknown and the quality of spectra generated is poor and does not allow confident identification. The post-source decay (PSD) fragmentation of singly charged tryptic peptide ions generated by MALDI-TOF/TOF typically results in low fragmentation efficiency and/or complex spectra, including backbone fragmentation ions (series b and y), internal fragmentation etc. Interpreting these data either manually and/or using de novo sequencing software can frequently be a challenge. To overcome this limitation when studying the proteome of adult Angiostrongylus costaricensis, a nematode with unknown genome, we have used chemical N-terminal derivatization of the tryptic peptides with 4-sulfophenyl isothiocyanate (SPITC) prior to MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. This methodology has recently been reported to enhance the quality of MALDI-TOF/TOF-PSD data, allowing the obtainment of complete sequence of most of the peptides and thus facilitating de novo peptide sequencing. Our approach, consisting of SPITC derivatization along with manual spectra interpretation and Blast analysis, was able to positively identify 76% of analyzed samples, whereas MASCOT analysis of derivatized samples, MASCOT analysis of nonderivatized samples and PMF of nonderivatized samples yielded only 35, 41 and 12% positive identifications, respectively. Moreover, de novo sequencing of SPITC modified peptides resulted in protein sequences not available in NCBInr database paving the way to the discovery of new protein molecules.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Considering the tremendous complexity and the wide dynamic range of protein samples from biological origin and their proteolytic peptide mixtures, proteomics largely requires simplification strategies. One common approach to reduce sample complexity is to target a particular amino acid in proteins or peptides, such as cysteine (Cys), with chemical tags in order to reduce the analysis to a subset of the whole proteome. The present work describes the synthesis and the use of two new cysteinyl tags, so‐called cysteine‐reactive covalent capture tags (C3T), for the isolation of Cys‐containing peptides. These bifunctional molecules were specifically designed to react with cysteines through iodoacetyl and acryloyl moieties and permit efficient selection of the tagged peptides. To do so, a thioproline was chosen as the isolating group to form, after a deprotection/activation step, a thiazolidine with an aldehyde resin by the covalent capture (CC) method. The applicability of the enrichment strategy was demonstrated on small synthetic peptides as well as on peptides derived from digested proteins. Mass spectrometric (MS) analysis and tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) sequencing confirmed the efficient and straightforward selection of the cysteine‐containing peptides. The combination of C3T and CC methods provides an effective alternative to reduce sample complexity and access low abundance proteins. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI), Peptide Mass Fingerprinting (PMF) and MALDI-MS/MS ion search (using MASCOT) have become the preferred methods for high-throughput identification of proteins. Unfortunately, PMF can be ambiguous, mainly when the genome of the organism under investigation is unknown and the quality of spectra generated is poor and does not allow confident identification. The post-source decay (PSD) fragmentation of singly charged tryptic peptide ions generated by MALDI-TOF/TOF typically results in low fragmentation efficiency and/or complex spectra, including backbone fragmentation ions (series b and y), internal fragmentation etc. Interpreting these data either manually and/or using de novo sequencing software can frequently be a challenge. To overcome this limitation when studying the proteome of adult Angiostrongylus costaricensis, a nematode with unknown genome, we have used chemical N-terminal derivatization of the tryptic peptides with 4-sulfophenyl isothiocyanate (SPITC) prior to MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. This methodology has recently been reported to enhance the quality of MALDI-TOF/TOF-PSD data, allowing the obtainment of complete sequence of most of the peptides and thus facilitating de novo peptide sequencing. Our approach, consisting of SPITC derivatization along with manual spectra interpretation and Blast analysis, was able to positively identify 76% of analyzed samples, whereas MASCOT analysis of derivatized samples, MASCOT analysis of nonderivatized samples and PMF of nonderivatized samples yielded only 35, 41 and 12% positive identifications, respectively. Moreover, de novo sequencing of SPITC modified peptides resulted in protein sequences not available in NCBInr database paving the way to the discovery of new protein molecules.  相似文献   

14.
Despite significant technological and methodological advancements in peptide sequencing by mass spectrometry, analyzing peptides that exhibit only poor fragmentation upon collision-induced dissociation (CID) remains a challenge. A major cause for unfavorable fragmentation is insufficient proton 'mobility' due to charge localization at strongly basic sites, in particular, the guanidine group of arginine. We have recently demonstrated that the conversion of the guanidine group of the arginine side chain by malondialdehyde (MDA) is a convenient tool to reduce the basicity of arginine residues and can have beneficial effects for peptide fragmentation. In the present work, we have focused on peptides that typically yield incomplete sequence information in CID-MS/MS experiments. Energy-resolved tandem MS experiments were carried out on angiotensins and arginine-containing phosphopeptides to study in detail the influence of the modification step on the fragmentation process. MDA modification dramatically improved the fragmentation behavior of peptides that exhibited only one or two dominant cleavages in their unmodified form. Neutral loss of phosphoric acid from phosphopeptides carrying phosphoserine and threonine residues was significantly reduced in favor of a higher abundance of fragment ions. Complementary experiments were carried out on three different instrumental platforms (triple-quadrupole, 3D ion trap, quadrupole-linear ion trap hybrid) to ascertain that the observation is a general effect.  相似文献   

15.
Both the matrix selected and the laser fluence play important roles in MALDI-quadrupole/time of flight (QqTOF) fragmentation processes. "Hot" matrices, such as alpha-cyano4-hydroxycinnamic acid (HCCA), can increase fragmentation in MS spectra. Higher laser fluence also increases fragmentation. Typical peptide fragment ions observed in the QqTOF are a, b, and y ion series, which resemble low-energy CID product ions. This fragmentation may occur in the high-pressure region before the first mass-analyzing quadrupole. Fragment ions can be selected by the first quadrupole (Q1), and further sequenced by conventional MS/MS. This allows pseudo-MS3 experiments to be performed. For peptides of higher molecular weight, pseudo-MS3 can extend the mass range beyond what is usually accessible for sequencing, by allowing one to sequence a fragment ion of lower molecular weight instead of the full-length peptide. Peptides that predominantly show a single product ion after MS/MS yield improved sequence information when this technique is applied. This method was applied to the analysis of an in vitro phosphorylated peptide, where the intact enzymatically-generated peptide showed poor dissociation via MS/MS. Sequencing a fragment ion from the phosphopeptide enabled the phosphorylation site to be unambiguously determined.  相似文献   

16.
We describe CHASE, a novel algorithm for automated de novo sequencing based on the mass spectrometric (MS) fragmentation analysis of tryptic peptides. This algorithm is used for protein identification from sequence similarity criteria and consists of four steps: (1) derivatization of tryptic peptides at the N-terminus with a negatively charged reagent; (2) post-source decay (PSD) fragmentation analysis of peptides; (3) interpretation of the mass peaks with the CHASE algorithm and reconstruction of the amino acid sequence; (4) transfer of these data to software for protein identifications based on sequence homology (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, BLAST). This procedure deduced the correct amino acid sequence of tryptic peptide samples and also was able to deduce the correct sequence from difficult mass patterns and identify the amino acid sequence. This allows complete automation of the process starting from MS fragmentation of complex peptide mixtures at low concentration (e.g. from silver-stained gel bands) to identification of the protein. We also show that if PSD data are collected in a single spectrum (instead of the segmented mode offered by conventional matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) instrumentation), the complete workflow from MS-PSD data acquisition to similarity-based identification can be completely automated. This strategy may be applied to proteomic studies for protein identification based on automated de novo sequencing instead of MS or tandem MS patterns. We describe the Charge Assisted Sequencing Engine (CHASE) algorithm, the working protocol, the performance of the algorithm on spectra from MALDI-TOFMS and the data comparison between a TOF and a TOF-TOF instrument.  相似文献   

17.
Peptide fragments such as b and y sequence ions generated upon low‐energy collision‐induced dissociation have been routinely used for tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS)‐based peptide/protein identification. The underlying formation mechanisms have been studied extensively and described within the literature. As a result, the ‘mobile proton model’ and ‘pathways in competition model’ have been built to interpret a majority of peptide fragmentation behavior. However, unusual peptide fragments which involve unfamiliar fragmentation pathways or various rearrangement reactions occasionally appear in MS/MS spectra, resulting in confused MS/MS interpretations. In this work, a series of unfamiliar c ions are detected in MS/MS spectra of the model peptides having an N‐terminal Arg or deuterohemin group upon low‐energy collision‐induced dissociation process. Both the protonated Arg and deuterohemin group play an important role in retention of a positive charge at the N‐terminus that is remote from the cleavage sites. According to previous reports and our studies involving amino acid substitutions and hydrogen–deuterium exchange, we propose a McLafferty‐type rearrangement via charge‐remote fragmentation as the potential mechanism to explain the formation of c ions from precursor peptide ions or unconventional b ions. Density functional theory calculations are also employed in order to elucidate the proposed fragmentation mechanisms. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

18.
Protein identification is routinely accomplished by peptide sequencing using mass spectrometry (MS) after enzymatic digestion. Site-specific chemical modification may improve peptide ionization efficiency or sequence coverage in mass spectrometry. We report herein that amino group of lysine residue in peptides can be selectively modified by reaction with a peroxycarbonate and the resulting lysine peroxycarbamates undergo homolytic fragmentation under conditions of low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID) in electrospray ionization (ESI) and matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization (MALDI) MS. Selective modification of lysine residue in peptides by our strategy can induce specific peptide cleavage at or near the lysine site. Studies using deuterated analogues of modified lysine indicate that fragmentation of the modified peptides involves apparent free-radical processes that lead to peptide chain fragmentation and side-chain loss. The formation of a-, c-, or z-types of ions in MS is reminiscent of the proposed free-radical mechanisms in low-energy electron capture dissociation (ECD) processes that may have better sequence coverage than that of the conventional CID method. This site-specific cleavage of peptides by free radical- promoted processes is feasible and such strategies may aid the protein sequencing analysis and have potential applications in top-down proteomics.  相似文献   

19.
Owing to its labile nature, a new role for cysteine sulfenic acid (–SOH) modification has emerged. This oxidative modification modulates protein function by acting as a redox switch during cellular signaling. The identification of proteins that undergo this modification represents a methodological challenge, and its resolution remains a matter of current interest. The development of strategies to chemically modify cysteinyl‐containing peptides for liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS) analysis has increased significantly within the past decade. The method of choice to selectively label sulfenic acid is based on the use of dimedone or its derivatives. For these chemical probes to be effective on a proteome‐wide level, their reactivity toward –SOH must be high to ensure reaction completion. In addition, the presence of an adduct should not interfere with electrospray ionization, the efficiency of induced dissociation in MS/MS experiments or with the identification of Cys‐modified peptides by automated database searching algorithms. Herein, we employ a targeted proteomics approach to study the electrospray ionization and fragmentation effects of different –SOH specific probes and compared them to commonly used alkylating agents. We then extend our study to a whole proteome extract using shotgun proteomic approaches. These experiments enable us to demonstrate that dimedone adducts do not interfere with electrospray by suppressing the ionization nor impede product ion assignment by automated search engines, which detect a + 138 Da increase from unmodified peptides. Collectively, these results suggest that dimedone can be a powerful tool to identify sulfenic acid modifications by high‐throughput shotgun proteomics of a whole proteome. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
Peptides modified by pyridoxal‐5′‐phosphate (PLP), linked to a lysine residue via reductive amination, exhibit distinct spectral characteristics in the collision‐induced dissociation (CID) tandem mass (MS/MS) spectra that are described here. The MS/MS spectra typically display two dominant peaks whose m/z values correspond to neutral losses of [H3PO4] (?98 Da) and the PLP moiety as [C8H10NO5P] (?231 Da) from the precursor peptide ion, respectively. Few other peaks are observed. Recognition of this distinct fragmentation behavior is imperative since determining sequences and sites of modifications relies on the formation of amide backbone cleavage products for subsequent interpretation via proteome database searching. Additionally, PLP‐modified peptides exhibit suppressed precursor ionization efficiency which diminishes their detection in complex mixtures. Presented here is a protocol which describes an enrichment strategy for PLP‐modified peptides combined with neutral loss screening and peptide mass fingerprinting to map the PLP‐bonding site in a known PLP‐dependent protein. This approach represents an efficient alternative to site‐directed mutagenesis which has been the traditional method used for PLP‐bonding site localization in proteins. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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