Publication | Closed Access
Extending Top-Down Mass Spectrometry to Proteins with Masses Greater Than 200 Kilodaltons
325
Citations
22
References
2006
Year
Biological Mass SpectrometryMolecular BiologyPeptide ScienceUnidentified Disulfide BondsProtein FoldingCovalent Bond DissociationProteomicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryDissociation LimitationComputational Mass SpectrometryMolecular ModelingBiomolecular EngineeringTop-down Mass SpectrometryNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryMass SpectrometryProtein Mass SpectrometryNative Mass SpectrometryMedicineMolecular Fragmentation
For characterization of sequence and posttranslational modifications, molecular and fragment ion mass data from ionizing and dissociating a protein in the mass spectrometer are far more specific than are masses of peptides from the protein's digestion. We extend the ∼500-residue, ∼50-kilodalton (kD) dissociation limitation of this top-down methodology by using electrospray additives, heated vaporization, and separate noncovalent and covalent bond dissociation. This process can cleave 287 interresidue bonds in the termini of a 1314-residue (144-kD) protein, specify previously unidentified disulfide bonds between 8 of 27 cysteines in a 1714-residue (200-kD) protein, and correct sequence predictions in two proteins, one with 2153 residues (229 kD).
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