Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens. / Rand, Kasper Dyrberg; Adams, Christopher M; Zubarev, Roman; Jørgensen, Thomas.

In: Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol. 130, No. 4, 2008, p. 1341-9.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rand, KD, Adams, CM, Zubarev, R & Jørgensen, T 2008, 'Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens', Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 130, no. 4, pp. 1341-9. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja076448i

APA

Rand, K. D., Adams, C. M., Zubarev, R., & Jørgensen, T. (2008). Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 130(4), 1341-9. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja076448i

Vancouver

Rand KD, Adams CM, Zubarev R, Jørgensen T. Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2008;130(4):1341-9. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja076448i

Author

Rand, Kasper Dyrberg ; Adams, Christopher M ; Zubarev, Roman ; Jørgensen, Thomas. / Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens. In: Journal of the American Chemical Society. 2008 ; Vol. 130, No. 4. pp. 1341-9.

Bibtex

@article{c9bc9e5219e84107b83e26724771bb93,
title = "Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens",
abstract = "Hydrogen (1H/2H) exchange combined with mass spectrometry (HX-MS) has become a recognized method for the analysis of protein structural dynamics. Presently, the incorporated deuterons are typically localized by enzymatic cleavage of the labeled proteins and single residue resolution is normally only obtained for a few residues. Determination of site-specific deuterium levels by gas-phase fragmentation in tandem mass spectrometers would greatly increase the applicability of the HX-MS method. The biggest obstacle in achieving this goal is the intramolecular hydrogen migration (i.e., hydrogen scrambling) that occurs during vibrational excitation of gas-phase ions. Unlike traditional collisional ion activation, electron capture dissociation (ECD) is not associated with substantial vibrational excitation. We investigated the extent of intramolecular backbone amide hydrogen (1H/2H) migration upon ECD using peptides with a unique selective deuterium incorporation. Our results show that only limited amide hydrogen migration occurs upon ECD, provided that vibrational excitation prior to the electron capture event is minimized. Peptide ions that are excessively vibrationally excited in the electrospray ion source by, e.g., high declustering potentials or during precursor ion selection (via sideband excitation) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap undergo nearly complete hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. Similarly, collision-induced dissociation (CID) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap results in complete or extensive hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. This precludes the use of CID as a method to obtain site-specific information from proteins that are labeled in solution-phase 1H/2H exchange experiments. In contrast, the deuteration levels of the c- and z-fragment ions generated from ECD closely mimic the known solution deuteration pattern of the selectively labeled peptides. This excellent correlation between the results obtained from gas phase and solution suggests that ECD holds great promise as a general method to obtain single residue resolution in proteins from solution 1H/2H exchange experiments.",
author = "Rand, {Kasper Dyrberg} and Adams, {Christopher M} and Roman Zubarev and Thomas J{\o}rgensen",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1021/ja076448i",
language = "English",
volume = "130",
pages = "1341--9",
journal = "Journal of the American Chemical Society",
issn = "0002-7863",
publisher = "ACS Publications",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Electron capture dissociation proceeds with a low degree of intramolecular migration of peptide amide hydrogens

AU - Rand, Kasper Dyrberg

AU - Adams, Christopher M

AU - Zubarev, Roman

AU - Jørgensen, Thomas

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Hydrogen (1H/2H) exchange combined with mass spectrometry (HX-MS) has become a recognized method for the analysis of protein structural dynamics. Presently, the incorporated deuterons are typically localized by enzymatic cleavage of the labeled proteins and single residue resolution is normally only obtained for a few residues. Determination of site-specific deuterium levels by gas-phase fragmentation in tandem mass spectrometers would greatly increase the applicability of the HX-MS method. The biggest obstacle in achieving this goal is the intramolecular hydrogen migration (i.e., hydrogen scrambling) that occurs during vibrational excitation of gas-phase ions. Unlike traditional collisional ion activation, electron capture dissociation (ECD) is not associated with substantial vibrational excitation. We investigated the extent of intramolecular backbone amide hydrogen (1H/2H) migration upon ECD using peptides with a unique selective deuterium incorporation. Our results show that only limited amide hydrogen migration occurs upon ECD, provided that vibrational excitation prior to the electron capture event is minimized. Peptide ions that are excessively vibrationally excited in the electrospray ion source by, e.g., high declustering potentials or during precursor ion selection (via sideband excitation) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap undergo nearly complete hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. Similarly, collision-induced dissociation (CID) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap results in complete or extensive hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. This precludes the use of CID as a method to obtain site-specific information from proteins that are labeled in solution-phase 1H/2H exchange experiments. In contrast, the deuteration levels of the c- and z-fragment ions generated from ECD closely mimic the known solution deuteration pattern of the selectively labeled peptides. This excellent correlation between the results obtained from gas phase and solution suggests that ECD holds great promise as a general method to obtain single residue resolution in proteins from solution 1H/2H exchange experiments.

AB - Hydrogen (1H/2H) exchange combined with mass spectrometry (HX-MS) has become a recognized method for the analysis of protein structural dynamics. Presently, the incorporated deuterons are typically localized by enzymatic cleavage of the labeled proteins and single residue resolution is normally only obtained for a few residues. Determination of site-specific deuterium levels by gas-phase fragmentation in tandem mass spectrometers would greatly increase the applicability of the HX-MS method. The biggest obstacle in achieving this goal is the intramolecular hydrogen migration (i.e., hydrogen scrambling) that occurs during vibrational excitation of gas-phase ions. Unlike traditional collisional ion activation, electron capture dissociation (ECD) is not associated with substantial vibrational excitation. We investigated the extent of intramolecular backbone amide hydrogen (1H/2H) migration upon ECD using peptides with a unique selective deuterium incorporation. Our results show that only limited amide hydrogen migration occurs upon ECD, provided that vibrational excitation prior to the electron capture event is minimized. Peptide ions that are excessively vibrationally excited in the electrospray ion source by, e.g., high declustering potentials or during precursor ion selection (via sideband excitation) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap undergo nearly complete hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. Similarly, collision-induced dissociation (CID) in the external linear quadrupole ion trap results in complete or extensive hydrogen (1H/2H) scrambling. This precludes the use of CID as a method to obtain site-specific information from proteins that are labeled in solution-phase 1H/2H exchange experiments. In contrast, the deuteration levels of the c- and z-fragment ions generated from ECD closely mimic the known solution deuteration pattern of the selectively labeled peptides. This excellent correlation between the results obtained from gas phase and solution suggests that ECD holds great promise as a general method to obtain single residue resolution in proteins from solution 1H/2H exchange experiments.

U2 - 10.1021/ja076448i

DO - 10.1021/ja076448i

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 18171065

VL - 130

SP - 1341

EP - 1349

JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society

JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society

SN - 0002-7863

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 40129926