Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7606211 | Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2007 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
A unique collision-induced dissociation pattern was observed for protonated polyproline peptides of length n in which ynâ2 and/or ynâ4 ions were formed in much higher abundance than any other product ions. Cleavage occurs only at every other amide bond, such that product ions are formed only from the losses of even numbers of proline residues. Exclusive losses of even numbers of proline residues were not observed from sodiated peptides. Further study of the tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) patterns of protonated proline-rich peptides showed that the substitution of alanine in the second position of polyproline peptides did not prevent the dominant formation of ynâ2 and ynâ4 ions. The loss of ProAla to form the y8 ion from (ProAlaPro8NH2+H)+ was as abundant as the loss of ProPro from (Pro10NH2+H)+. However, modification of the peptides that presumably affected the location of the proton on the peptide did alter the MS/MS spectra. Pro10 and Pro5 with blocked N-termini or with arginine substituted for the first proline residue did not form abundant ynâ2 or ynâ4 ions. MS3 and double resonance experiments showed that dissociation of intermediate yn product ions can produce ynâ2 ions, but are not necessary dissociation pathway intermediates. This analysis suggests that the ionizing proton must be located at the N-terminus for the peptide ion to dissociate in this manner.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Anita G. Unnithan, Matthew J. Myer, Christopher J. Veale, Allison S. Danell,