Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10547233 | Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Mass spectrometry and gas phase ion mobility [gas phase electrophoretic macromolecule analyzer (GEMMA)] with electrospray ionization were used to characterize the structure of the noncovalent 28-subunit 20S proteasome from Methanosarcina thermophila and rabbit. ESI-MS measurements with a quadrupole time-of-flight analyzer of the 192 kDa α7-ring and the intact 690 kDa α7β7β7α7 are consistent with their expected stoichiometries. Collisionally activated dissociation of the 20S gas phase complex yields loss of individual α-subunits only, and it is generally consistent with the known α7β7β7α7 architecture. The analysis of the binding of a reversible inhibitor to the 20S proteasome shows the expected stoichiometry of one inhibitor for each β-subunit. Ion mobility measurements of the α7-ring and the α7β7β7α7 complex yield electrophoretic diameters of 10.9 and 15.1 nm, respectively; these dimensions are similar to those measured by crystallographic methods. Sequestration of multiple apo-myoglobin substrates by a lactacystin-inhibited 20S proteasome is demonstrated by GEMMA experiments. This study suggests that many elements of the gas phase structure of large protein complexes are preserved upon desolvation, and that methods such as mass spectrometry and ion mobility analysis can reveal structural details of the solution protein complex.
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Authors
Joseph A. Loo, Beniam Berhane, Catherine S. Kaddis, Kerry M. Wooding, Yongming Xie, Stanley L. Kaufman, Igor V. Chernushevich,