Literature DB >> 15571332

Use of performic acid oxidation to expand the mass distribution of tryptic peptides.

Rune Matthiesen1, Guy Bauw, Karen G Welinder.   

Abstract

Significant identification of proteins by mass fingerprinting and partial sequencing of tryptic peptides is central to proteomics. However, peptide masses cluster with distances of approximately 1 Da. Expanding these clusters will give more peptides of unique masses, thereby identifying proteins with a higher significance. The mass clusters can be expanded downward by including more oxygen atoms in the peptides. Classic performic acid oxidation modifies three residues, Cys to CysO(3), Met to MetO(2), and Trp to TrpO(2). In this study, we compare the mass distributions of tryptic peptides computed from the predicted proteomes of Bacillus subtilis, Drosophila melanogaster, Arabidopsis thaliana, and Homo sapiens modified by oxidation, reduction, and reduction followed by carboxymethylation, carboxamidomethylation, or pyridylethylation. Forty to 46% of the eukaryotic tryptic peptides contain Cys, Met, or Trp. Additionally, the importance of mass accuracy of differentially modified tryptic peptides for significant protein identification by database searches was analyzed. The results show that performic acid oxidation gives markedly extended mass distributions at mass accuracies from +/-0.002 to +/-0.25 Da for the eukaryotes. The effect of the expanded mass distribution on significant protein identification was illustrated by searching simulated mass peak lists against the databases containing oxidized and reduced tryptic peptides. The specificity of formic acid oxidation was tested experimentally, and no general adverse effects were detected. Tryptic peptides provided a 100% sequence coverage of oxidized barley grain peroxidase by LC-MS, and the sequence coverages of oxidized and carboxymethylated bovine serum albumin were similar by MALDI-TOF MS analyses.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15571332     DOI: 10.1021/ac049032l

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  3 in total

Review 1.  Oxidative protein labeling in mass-spectrometry-based proteomics.

Authors:  Julien Roeser; Rainer Bischoff; Andries P Bruins; Hjalmar P Permentier
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2010-02-13       Impact factor: 4.142

2.  Shifting unoccupied spectral space in mass spectrum of peptide fragment ions.

Authors:  Bekim Bajrami; Yu Shi; Pascal Lapierre; Xudong Yao
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2009-07-14       Impact factor: 3.109

3.  Site specific identification of endogenous S-nitrosocysteine proteomes.

Authors:  Paschalis-Thomas Doulias; Margarita Tenopoulou; Karthik Raju; Lynn A Spruce; Steven H Seeholzer; Harry Ischiropoulos
Journal:  J Proteomics       Date:  2013-06-05       Impact factor: 4.044

  3 in total

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