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Ultraviolet Photodissociation Mass Spectrometry of Bis-aryl Hydrazone Conjugated Peptides
26
Citations
35
References
2009
Year
Ultraviolet PhotodissociationPhotochemistryBiochemistryNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPeptide EngineeringMass SpectrometryNonconjugated PeptidesBioconjugationPeptide SynthesisOrganic ChemistryAnalytical ChemistryConjugated Model PeptidesChemistryChemical BiologyMedicineBiophysicsSupramolecular Photochemistry
Ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD) at 355 nm was used to rapidly identify peptides which had been chemically conjugated through bis-aryl hydrazone (BAH) moieties. The two biomolecules of interest were separately tagged to introduce either an aldehyde or a hydrazine and then conjugated together through these functional groups to from the UV-chromogenic BAH-group. In a mock mixture of peptides, UVPD was used to screen for the BAH-conjugated peptides in direct infusion ESI-UVPD-MS and online LC-UVPD-MS methods by comparing the abundances of the ions with the laser off and with the laser on. Only the BAH-conjugated peptides were observed to photodissociate upon exposure to UV irradiation, thus affording excellent selectivity for the pinpointing the relevant conjugated peptides in a complex mixture of nonconjugated peptides. UVPD analysis of conjugated model peptides indicated that the UVPD efficiencies of these species were charge state dependent. BAH-conjugated peptides that had a mobile proton which could protonate the basic BAH-moiety underwent more efficient photodissociation than the peptide ions with sequestered protons. Ultraviolet photodissociation of BAH-cross-linked peptides also yielded more diagnostic sequence ions than CID to unambiguously locate the site of conjugation.
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