Effects of Charge State and Cationizing Agent on the Electron Capture Dissociation of a Peptide
- 18 March 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 76 (8) , 2231-2238
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac035431p
Abstract
Electron capture dissociation (ECD) is a promising method for de novo sequencing proteins and peptides and for locating the positions of labile posttranslational modifications and binding sites of noncovalently bound species. We report the ECD of a synthetic peptide containing 10 alanine residues and 6 lysine residues uniformly distributed across the sequence. ECD of the (M + 2H)2+ produces a limited range of c (c7−c15) and z (z9−z15) fragment ions, but ECD of higher charge states produces a wider range of c (c2−c15) and z (z2−z6, z9−z15) ions. Fragmentation efficiency increases with increasing precursor charge state, and efficiencies up to 88% are achieved. Heating the (M + 2H)2+ to 150 °C does not increase the observed range of ECD fragment ions, indicating that the limited products are due to backbone cleavages occurring near charges and not due to effects of tertiary structure. ECD of the (M + 2Li)2+ and (M + 2Cs)2+ produces di- and monometalated analogues of the same c and z ions observed from the (M + 2H)2+, with the abundance of dimetalated fragment ions increasing with fragment ion mass, a result consistent with the metal cations being located near the peptide termini to minimize Coulombic repulsion. In stark contrast to the ECD results, collisional activation of cesiated dications overwhelmingly results in ejection of Cs+. The abundance of cesiated fragment ions formed from ECD of the (M + Cs + Li)2+ exceeds that of lithiated fragment ions by 10:1. ECD of the (M + H + Li)2+ results in exclusivelylithiated c and z ions, indicating an overwhelming preference for neutralization and cleavage at protonated sites over metalated sites. These results are consistent with preferential neutralization of the cation with the highest recombination energy.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- NCα Bond Dissociation Energies and Kinetics in Amide and Peptide Radicals. Is the Dissociation a Non-ergodic Process?Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2003
- Origin of Asymmetric Charge Partitioning in the Dissociation of Gas-Phase Protein HomodimersJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2003
- Electron capture dissociation of weakly bound polypeptide polycationic complexesRapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 2002
- 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
- Analytical Properties of the Nanoelectrospray Ion SourceAnalytical Chemistry, 1996
- On the sodium and lithium ion affinities of some α-amino acidsJournal of Mass Spectrometry, 1993
- Sustained off-resonance irradiation for collision-activated dissociation involving Fourier transform mass spectrometry. Collision-activated dissociation technique that emulates infrared multiphoton dissociationAnalytica Chimica Acta, 1991
- Determination of amino acid sequences in peptide mixtures by mass spectrometryBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1970
- Mass Spectrometry of N-Methylated Peptide DerivativesNature, 1968