Publication | Closed Access
Combined Use of Ion Mobility and Collision-Induced Dissociation To Investigate the Opening of Disulfide Bridges by Electron-Transfer Dissociation in Peptides Bearing Two Disulfide Bonds
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Citations
23
References
2015
Year
Peptide EngineeringMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceCysteine PairingAnalytical UltracentrifugationProtein FoldingStructure-function Enzyme KineticsDisulfide BondsBiophysicsDisulfide BridgesProtein ChemistryBiochemistryCysteine ConnectivityMolecular ModelingBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryPeptide SynthesisMolecular BiophysicsCollision-induced DissociationMedicineMolecular Fragmentation
Disulfide bonds are post-translational modifications (PTMs) often found in peptides and proteins. They increase their stability toward enzymatic degradations and provide the structure and (consequently) the activity of such folded proteins. The characterization of disulfide patterns, i.e., the cysteine connectivity, is crucial to achieve a global picture of the active conformation of the protein of interest. Electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) constitutes a valuable tool to cleave the disulfide bonds in the gas phase, avoiding chemical reduction/alkylation in solution. To characterize the cysteine pairing, the present work proposes (i) to reduce by ETD one of the two disulfide bridges of model peptides, resulting in the opening of the cyclic structures, (ii) to separate the generated species by ion mobility, and (iii) to characterize the species using collision-induced dissociation (CID). Results of this strategy applied to several peptides show different behaviors depending on the connectivity. The loss of SH· radical species, observed for all the peptides, confirms the cleavage of the disulfides during the ETD process.
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