High-Sensitivity Electron Capture Dissociation Tandem FTICR Mass Spectrometry of Microelectrosprayed Peptides
- 6 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 73 (15), 3605-3610
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac010141z
Abstract
Electron capture dissociation (ECD) has previously been shown by other research groups to result in greater peptide sequence coverage than other ion dissociation techniques and to localize labile posttranslational modifications. Here, ECD has been achieved for 10−13-mer peptides microelectrosprayed from 10 nM (10 fmol/μL) solutions and for tryptic peptides from a 50 nM unfractionated digest of a 28-kDa protein. Tandem Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectra contain fragment ions corresponding to cleavages at all possible peptide backbone amine bonds, except on the N-terminal side of proline, for substance P and neurotensin. For luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, all but two expected backbone amine bond cleavages are observed. The tandem FTICR mass spectra of the tryptic peptides contain fragment ions corresponding to cleavages at 6 of 12 (1545.7-Da peptide) and 8 of 21 (2944.5-Da peptide) expected backbone amine bonds. The present sensitivity is 200−2000 times higher than previously reported. These results show promise for ECD as a tool to produce sequence tags for identification of peptides in complex mixtures available only in limited amounts, as in proteomics.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chop and changeTrends in Genetics, 2000
- c & en talks with . . .Chemical & Engineering News, 2000
- Electron Capture Dissociation of Gaseous Multiply-Charged Proteins Is Favored at Disulfide Bonds and Other Sites of High Hydrogen Atom AffinityJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry: A primerMass Spectrometry Reviews, 1998
- Electron Capture Dissociation of Multiply Charged Protein Cations. A Nonergodic ProcessJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1998
- High Sensitivity Collisionally-activated Decomposition Tandem Mass Spectrometry on a Novel Quadrupole/Orthogonal-acceleration Time-of-flight Mass SpectrometerRapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 1996
- Multiply charged ionsMass Spectrometry Reviews, 1995
- An electrospray‐ionization mass spectrometer with new featuresRapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 1990
- Some Developments in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of SolidsScience, 1989
- Space charge effects in Fourier transform mass spectrometry. II. Mass calibrationAnalytical Chemistry, 1984