Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1195958 | Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2009 | 5 Pages |
In solution-phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX), it is essential to minimize the back-exchange level of H for D after the exchange has been quenched, to accurately assign protein conformation and protein–protein or protein–ligand interactions. Reversed-phase HPLC is conducted at low pH and low temperature to desalt and separate proteolytic fragments. However, back exchange averages roughly 30% because of the long exposure to H2O in the mobile phase. In this report, we first show that there is no significant backbone amide hydrogen back exchange during quench and digestion; backbone exchange occurs primarily during subsequent liquid chromatography separation. We then show that a rapid reversed-phase separation reduces back exchange for HDX by at least 25%, resulting from the dramatically reduced retention time of the peptide fragments on the column. The influence of retention time on back exchange was also evaluated. The rapid separation coupled with high-resolution FT-ICR MS at 14.5 T provides high amino acid sequence coverage, high sample throughput, and high reproducibility and reliability.
Graphical AbstractA 2-min sham digestion indicates no backbone back exchange during digestion for fully exchanged LHRH. Rapid chromatography with a ProZap™ C18 column reduces back exchange by about one third compared to a Jupiter™ C5 column.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (150 K)Download as PowerPoint slide