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A Pseudo MS<sup>3</sup>Approach for Identification of Disulfide-Bonded Proteins: Uncommon Product Ions and Database Search
24
Citations
50
References
2011
Year
Disulfide-bonded ProteinsStructural BioinformaticsMolecular BiologyAnalytical UltracentrifugationUncommon Product IonsPseudo MsProtein FoldingBioanalysisMolecular RecognitionProteomicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryDatabase SearchStructural BiologyChicken LysozymeNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryMass SpectrometryProtein Mass SpectrometryPeptide SynthesisNative Mass SpectrometryProtein EngineeringMedicine
It has previously been reported that disulfide and backbone bonds of native intact proteins can be concurrently cleaved using electrospray ionization (ESI) and collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). However, the cleavages of disulfide bonds result in different cysteine modifications in product ions, making it difficult to identify the disulfide-bonded proteins via database search. To solve this identification problem, we have developed a pseudo MS(3) approach by combining nozzle-skimmer dissociation (NSD) and CID on a quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometer using chicken lysozyme as a model. Although many of the product ions were similar to those typically seen in MS/MS spectra of enzymatically derived peptides, additional uncommon product ions were detected including c(i-1) ions (the i(th) residue being aspartic acid, arginine, lysine and dehydroalanine) as well as those from a scrambled sequence. The formation of these uncommon types of product ions, likely caused by the lack of mobile protons, were proposed to involve bond rearrangements via a six-membered ring transition state and/or salt bridge(s). A search of 20 pseudo MS(3) spectra against the Gallus gallus (chicken) database using Batch-Tag, a program originally designed for bottom up MS/MS analysis, identified chicken lysozyme as the only hit with the expectation values less than 0.02 for 12 of the spectra. The pseudo MS(3) approach may help to identify disulfide-bonded proteins and determine the associated post-translational modifications (PTMs); the confidence in the identification may be improved by incorporating the fragmentation characteristics into currently available search programs.
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