| Literature DB >> 22476890 |
Owen S Skinner1, Fred W McLafferty, Kathrin Breuker.
Abstract
The structural evolution of ubiquitin after transfer into the gas phase was studied by electron capture dissociation. Site-specific fragment yields show that ubiquitin's solution fold is overall unstable in the gas phase, but unfolding caused by loss of solvent is slowest in regions stabilized by salt bridges.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22476890 PMCID: PMC3345118 DOI: 10.1007/s13361-012-0370-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ISSN: 1044-0305 Impact factor: 3.109
Figure 1.Intramolecular electrostatic interactions of Ubiquitin (PDB entry 1D3Z) with regions I (residues 1–18), II (19–35), III (36–58), and IV (59-76); basic (K, R, N-terminus) and acidic (D, E, C-terminus) residues in blue and red, respectively; hydrogen bonds: dashed lines, solid black lines connect sequence neighbors, green lines: possible salt bridges
Figure 2.Site-specific yields (a), (b) of , • fragments from ECD of ubiquitin (M + 7H)7+ ions 0.2 s (a) and 5 s (b) after transfer into the gas phase and yield difference (c); dashed horizontal lines illustrate calculated yields for random fragmentation
Figure 3.As in Figure 2, but with collisional activation after 0.1 s (105 eV laboratory frame energy)