Literature DB >> 15570570

Further studies on the fragmentation of protonated ions of peptides containing aspartic acid, glutamic acid, cysteine sulfinic acid, and cysteine sulfonic acid.

Lijie Men1, Yinsheng Wang.   

Abstract

Here we examined the fragmentation, on a quadrupole ion-trap mass spectrometer, of the protonated ions of a group of peptides containing one arginine and two different acidic amino acids, one being aspartic acid (Asp) or glutamic acid (Glu) and the other being cysteine sulfinic acid [C(SO2H)] or cysteine sulfonic acid [C(SO3H)]. Our results showed that, upon collisional activation, the cleavage of the peptide bond C-terminal to C(SO2H) is much more facile than that of the peptide bond C-terminal to Asp, Glu, or C(SO3H). There is no significant difference, however, in susceptibility to cleavage of peptide bonds that are C-terminal to Asp, Glu, and C(SO3H). To understand these experimental observations, we carried out B3LYP/6-31G* density functional theory calculations for a model cleavage reaction of GXG --> b2 + Gly, in which X is Asp, Glu, C(SO2H), or C(SO3H). Our calculation results showed that the cleavage reaction is thermodynamically more favorable when X = C(SO2H) than when X = Asp or C(SO3H). We attributed the less facile cleavage of the amide bond after Glu to that the formation of a six-membered ring b ion for Glu-bearing peptides is kinetically not as favorable as the formation of a five-membered ring b ion for peptides containing the other three acidic amino acids. The results from this study may provide useful tools for peptide sequencing.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15570570     DOI: 10.1002/rcm.1748

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom        ISSN: 0951-4198            Impact factor:   2.419


  12 in total

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2.  The effect of histidine oxidation on the dissociation patterns of peptide ions.

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3.  Improved sequencing of oxidized cysteine and methionine containing peptides using electron transfer dissociation.

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4.  The influence glutamic acid in protonated b3 → b2 formation from VGEIG and related analogs.

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Journal:  Int J Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-07-01       Impact factor: 1.986

5.  Inactivation of thiol-dependent enzymes by hypothiocyanous acid: role of sulfenyl thiocyanate and sulfenic acid intermediates.

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6.  Single-site oxidation, cysteine 108 to cysteine sulfinic acid, in D-amino acid oxidase from Trigonopsis variabilis and its structural and functional consequences.

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7.  Targeted quantitation of site-specific cysteine oxidation in endogenous proteins using a differential alkylation and multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry approach.

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Review 8.  Oxidative protein labeling in mass-spectrometry-based proteomics.

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9.  Proteome-wide detection and quantitative analysis of irreversible cysteine oxidation using long column UPLC-pSRM.

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10.  LC-MS/MS analysis and comparison of oxidative damages on peptides induced by pathogen reduction technologies for platelets.

Authors:  Michel Prudent; Giona Sonego; Mélanie Abonnenc; Jean-Daniel Tissot; Niels Lion
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 3.109

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