Literature DB >> 15100477

Methylating peptides to prevent adduct ion formation also directs cleavage in collision-induced dissociation mass spectrometry.

Clement Poon1, Harvey Kaplan, Paul M Mayer.   

Abstract

We investigated the effect of N-terminal amino group and carboxyl group methylation on peptide analysis by electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). Permethylation of the N-terminal amino group and the carboxyl groups can reduce metal ion adducts but does not enhance sensitivity in electrospray as previously observed for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. N-terminal trimethylated peptides exhibit collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem mass spectra that differ from their unmodified analogs; the results support the mobile proton hypothesis of peptide fragmentation. A permanent positive charge at the N-terminus leads to competition between permanent-charge directed processes and loss of the N-terminal trimethyl amino group. Carboxyl methylation has no effect on fragmentation behavior other than to shift the mass of fragments containing methylated carboxyl groups. Comparison of regular and tandem mass spectra of different methylated peptides allowed probing the location of incomplete methylation, the proton displaced by alkali metal ions and the purity of a mass-selected methylated peptide ion.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15100477     DOI: 10.1255/ejms.582

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Mass Spectrom (Chichester)        ISSN: 1469-0667            Impact factor:   1.067


  1 in total

1.  Global amine and acid functional group modification of proteins.

Authors:  Casey J Krusemark; Jonathan T Ferguson; Craig D Wenger; Neil L Kelleher; Peter J Belshaw
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2008-01-10       Impact factor: 6.986

  1 in total

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