Literature DB >> 22476890

How ubiquitin unfolds after transfer into the gas phase.

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:  

Mesh:

Substances:

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


Introduction

Electrospray ionization (ESI) has revolutionized mass spectrometry (MS) by extending its applicability to large nonvolatile molecules. Although covalent bonding and, thus, molecular weight information, is usually preserved in ESI, retention of the noncovalent bonding of the solution structure has been demonstrated far less frequently [1-3]. ESI/MS is widely used to screen for ligands that bind to target proteins [4]; a better understanding of the effect of ESI on the noncovalent bonding in protein–ligand complexes would help evaluate the reliability of screening results. Unlike collisionally activated dissociation during which different conformers of the same net charge can rearrange to structurally similar transition states prior to fragmentation [5], electron capture dissociation (ECD) [6] can provide site-specific information on the structure and stability of gaseous protein ions [7]; key to this is the retention of noncovalent bonds during ECD [2, 3, 7–10]. ECD and “native ECD” [11] experiments showed that solution structure is not necessarily preserved in the gas phase; the highly stable protein cytochrome c (ΔG for global unfolding in solution = 42 ± 2 kJ/mol at 30 °C) [12] unfolds on a milliseconds timescale after transfer into the gas phase [13], whereas the fold of the moderately stable protein KIX (ΔG = 12 ± 1 kJ/mol at ∼27 °C) [14] is preserved in the gas phase on a timescale of at least 4 s [2]. Unfolding of cytochrome c after desolvation was also observed in ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) studies [15]. The 7+ ions of ubiquitin, whose structure is believed to most closely resemble its native fold, have been studied extensively [16]. In IMS experiments, Clemmer and coworkers observed substantial unfolding of 7+ ubiquitin ions on a timescale of 0.1 s after ESI [17], whereas a recent study by Wyttenbach and Bowers reports conditions under which these ions do not unfold in 0.1 s [18]. A previous ECD study has provided site-specific data on the gas phase structure and folding/unfolding of the 7+ ubiquitin ions [7], but these were probed >40 s after desolvation and were shown to be stable gas phase structures substantially different from those in solution. Here we report ECD data that reflect the initial structural changes of ubiquitin 7+ ions after transfer into the gas phase.

Experimental

Experiments were performed on a 7 T Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometer (Bruker, Vienna, Austria). After ESI (1.5 μL/min) of a 2 μM ubiquitin (Sigma-Aldrich, Vienna, Austria) solution in 79:20:1 H2O/CH3OH/CH3COOH at pH 3 (in which ubiquitin retains its native fold [19]) under conditions to minimize ion activation by collisions with background gas, (M + 7H)7+ ions were accumulated in the first hexapole (0.1 s), selected by m/z in the quadrupole, accumulated in the second hexapole (0.1 s), trapped in the FT-ICR cell, isolated, and irradiated with electrons (0.8 eV) for 30 ms. This experiment was repeated with 5 s ion storage in the FT-ICR cell prior to ECD, and with collisional activation at the head of the second hexapole. 500 scans were added for each spectrum. Data analysis utilized SNAP2 (Bruker, Vienna, Austria) and mMass [20] software. Site-specific fragment yields were calculated as %-values relative to all ECD products, considering that backbone cleavage gives a pair of complementary and • ions ( •, ions were also included for normalization but not shown in the figures because of their marginal abundance totaling to <4 %): 100 % = 0.5·[] + 0.5·[ •] + 0.5·[ •] + 0.5·[] + [reduced molecular ions and loss of small neutral species from the latter].

Results and Discussion

In ubiquitin’s native structure, only residues 72–76 are not involved in noncovalent bonding (Figure 1). If this fold were preserved in the gas phase, only fragments from cleavage at sites 72–75 would be found in the ECD spectra because intramolecular noncovalent bonding would prevent separation of all other fragments [2, 7]. However, ECD of the 7+ ions shows abundant , • fragment ions from cleavage at many other sites (Figure 2), indicating substantial unfolding after desolvation. Specifically, region I (residues 1–18) that includes β-strands 1 and 2 and region IV (residues 59–76) that includes β-strand 5 have unfolded in ∼57 % and ∼47 % of the ions after 0.2 s, respectively (Figure 2a). The extent of unfolding was calculated from integrated , • fragment ion yields in each region versus those expected from random cleavage in a fully extended structure (100 %/75 = 1.33 % yield per cleavage site). The similarity of the values for regions I and IV suggests that they have separated from the hydrophobic core in the same unfolding event. From the data in Figure 2a, regions II and III have unfolded in just 17 % and 5 % of the 7+ ions within 0.2 s, respectively.
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

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 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 The site-specific differences of fragment yields (Figure 2c) from ECD 0.2 and 5.2 s after transfer into the gas phase show a pattern very similar to that from ECD after 0.2 s (Figure 2a), indicating that the initial unfolding during the first 0.2 s continues during the next 5 s in the same manner. Exceptions to this are the fragment yields at sites 1–5, which do not increase in proportion from 0.2 to 5.2 s (Figure 2c), indicating that unfolding of residues 1–5 is largely complete after 0.2 s. After 5.2 s, 71 %, 22 %, 7 %, and 57 % of the ions have unfolded in regions I–IV, respectively, suggesting a regional order of stability of III > II > IV > I. Collisional activation of the 7+ ions 0.1 s after ESI under otherwise identical experimental conditions gave the fragmentation patterns shown in Figure 3a, b. The data indicate an extent of unfolding of 49 %, 13 %, 17 %, and 41 % in regions I–IV after 0.2 s, respectively. Again, the fragment yield differences from ECD 0.2 and 5.2 s after transfer into the gas phase (Figure 3c) show a pattern very similar to that from ECD after 0.2 s, indicating that the unfolding during the first 0.2 s continues during the next 5 s, with 81 %, 22 %, 27 %, and 58 % of the ions unfolded in regions I–IV after 5.2 s, respectively.
Figure 3.

As in Figure 2, but with collisional activation after 0.1 s (105 eV laboratory frame energy)

As in Figure 2, but with collisional activation after 0.1 s (105 eV laboratory frame energy) Apparently, the 26 hydrogen bonds of ubiquitin’s β-sheet (Figure 1) are insufficient to preserve the solution fold after desolvation: regions I and IV unfold in about half of the 7+ ions after just 0.2 s. On the other hand, region III, which is the most heterogeneous in terms of secondary structure, is unfolded in only 5 % and 7 % of the ions after 0.2 and 5.2 s, respectively. Substantial collisional activation is required to increase these fractions to 17 % and 27 %, indicating extensive stabilization. Region II that comprises the α-helix is unfolded in only ∼20 % of the ions at 0.2 and 5.2 s without collisional activation, suggesting that ubiquitin’s α-helix structure is more stable than its β-sheet in the absence of solvent. However, a recent study of KIX showed that helix stability in the gas phase critically depends on additional stabilization by salt bridges [2]. Salt bridges as stabilizing structural motifs have also been suggested by Williams and coworkers for gaseous peptide ions [21]. The very same collisional activation that increases the fraction of 7+ ions unfolded in regions I and III by 10 % and 20 % after 5.2 s, respectively, does not further unfold regions II (22 % at 0.2 and 5.2 s) and IV (57 % at 0.2, 58 % at 5.2 s). For region II, this is consistent with additional stabilization of the α-helix by salt bridges, but structural changes are nevertheless apparent from the different ECD fragmentation patterns for region II at 0 and 105 eV (Figure 2a, b and Figure 3a, b). These possibly involve rearrangements of salt bridges upon activation while retaining the helical structure. Similar rearrangements are indicated for the far less compact region IV, but not for regions I and III, whose ECD fragmentation patterns at 0 and 105 eV are very similar (Figure 2a, b and Figure 3a, b). Salt bridges, formed during the electrospray process or already present in solution, appear to play a dominant role in stabilizing regions of the native fold of ubiquitin after transfer into the gas phase. Six salt bridges are possible in the most stable region III that comprises 23 residues. The second most stable region II (17 residues) has five possible salt bridges. Only two salt bridges are possible in the least stable regions I and IV, respectively. Specifically, the N- and C-terminal β-strands 1 and 5 are held together by hydrogen bonds, but no salt bridges can provide additional stabilization. Regions I and IV comprise 36 out of ubiquitin’s 76 residues; their unfolding in just 0.2 s should result in a substantial increase in collision cross section for about half of the 7+ ions, consistent with IMS data that indicate unfolding of “compact” ions (∼1000 Å2) to form ∼50 % “partially folded” structures with cross sections between 1120 and 1500 Å2 0.2 s after ESI [17]. However, this study also finds ∼15 % “elongated” structures (>1500 Å2) after 0.2 s, increasing to ∼25 % in 5 s. The proportion of elongated structures indicated by our ECD data is smaller, with only 7 % of the 7+ ions unfolded in region III after 5 s. The ESI and ion transmission conditions of these IMS experiments appear to result in more extensive unfolding than those used here. Although the timescale of unfolding of ubiquitin after transfer into the gas phase evidently depends on experimental conditions [17, 18], the order of unfolding established here (region I > IV > II > III) is dictated by the extent to which the loss of hydrophobic bonding is compensated by electrostatic interactions, in particular salt bridges, in different regions of the native fold. Stabilization by salt bridges is also indicated for the 7+ ions probed 40 s after desolvation, which gave few fragments from cleavage at sites 11–58 [7], consistent with disintegration of the native fold and folding into stable gas phase structures [15, 17, 22]. The ECD data presented here complement IMS data, and allow for a structural interpretation of the unfolding of ubiquitin 7+ ions after transfer into the gas phase. Solvent removal destabilizes the native fold, with regions I and IV unfolding markedly faster than regions II and III. We attribute the observed regional stabilization in large part to salt bridges, consistent with recent findings for the three-helix bundle protein KIX [2]. The extent to which electrostatic interactions and, in particular, salt bridges can compensate for the loss of hydrophobic bonding largely defines the timescale available for structural probing of a solution fold in the gas phase.
  18 in total

1.  Two-state vs. multistate protein unfolding studied by optical melting and hydrogen exchange.

Authors:  L Mayne; S W Englander
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 6.725

2.  Detailed unfolding and folding of gaseous ubiquitin ions characterized by electron capture dissociation.

Authors:  Kathrin Breuker; HanBin Oh; David M Horn; Blas A Cerda; Fred W McLafferty
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2002-06-05       Impact factor: 15.419

3.  Dissociation of different conformations of ubiquitin ions.

Authors:  Ethan R Badman; Cherokee S Hoaglund-Hyzer; David E Clemmer
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 3.109

4.  Secondary and tertiary structures of gaseous protein ions characterized by electron capture dissociation mass spectrometry and photofragment spectroscopy.

Authors:  HanBin Oh; Kathrin Breuker; Siu Kwan Sze; Ying Ge; Barry K Carpenter; Fred W McLafferty
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-11-20       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Applications of ESI-MS in drug discovery: interrogation of noncovalent complexes.

Authors:  Steven A Hofstadler; Kristin A Sannes-Lowery
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 84.694

6.  Native electrospray and electron-capture dissociation FTICR mass spectrometry for top-down studies of protein assemblies.

Authors:  Hao Zhang; Weidong Cui; Jianzhong Wen; Robert E Blankenship; Michael L Gross
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2011-06-22       Impact factor: 6.986

7.  mMass 3: a cross-platform software environment for precise analysis of mass spectrometric data.

Authors:  Martin Strohalm; Daniel Kavan; Petr Novák; Michael Volný; Vladimír Havlícek
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2010-06-01       Impact factor: 6.986

8.  Nonergodic and conformational control of the electron capture dissociation of protein cations.

Authors:  Kathrin Breuker; HanBin Oh; Cheng Lin; Barry K Carpenter; Fred W McLafferty
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2004-09-20       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Blackbody infrared radiative dissociation of bradykinin and its analogues: energetics, dynamics, and evidence for salt-bridge structures in the gas phase.

Authors:  P D Schnier; W D Price; R A Jockusch; E R Williams
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  1996-07-31       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  The methanol-induced conformational transitions of beta-lactoglobulin, cytochrome c, and ubiquitin at low pH: a study by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry.

Authors:  K R Babu; A Moradian; D J Douglas
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 3.262

View more
  35 in total

1.  Protein Structural Studies by Traveling Wave Ion Mobility Spectrometry: A Critical Look at Electrospray Sources and Calibration Issues.

Authors:  Yu Sun; Siavash Vahidi; Modupeola A Sowole; Lars Konermann
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2015-09-14       Impact factor: 3.109

2.  Do charge state signatures guarantee protein conformations?

Authors:  Zoe Hall; Carol V Robinson
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-05-05       Impact factor: 3.109

3.  Solution dependence of the collisional activation of ubiquitin [M + 7H](7+) ions.

Authors:  Huilin Shi; Natalya Atlasevich; Samuel I Merenbloom; David E Clemmer
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 3.109

4.  Cation-induced stabilization of protein complexes in the gas phase: mechanistic insights from hemoglobin dissociation studies.

Authors:  JiangJiang Liu; Lars Konermann
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2014-01-23       Impact factor: 3.109

5.  Time-resolved pulsed hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry probes gaseous proteins structural kinetics.

Authors:  Khadijeh Rajabi
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2014-10-16       Impact factor: 3.109

6.  How Closely Related Are Conformations of Protein Ions Sampled by IM-MS to Native Solution Structures?

Authors:  Shu-Hua Chen; David H Russell
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2015-06-27       Impact factor: 3.109

7.  Does deamidation cause protein unfolding? A top-down tandem mass spectrometry study.

Authors:  Andrew J Soulby; Jack W Heal; Mark P Barrow; Rudolf A Roemer; Peter B O'Connor
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2015-04-14       Impact factor: 6.725

8.  Ligand migration in the gaseous insulin-CB7 complex--a cautionary tale about the use of ECD-MS for ligand binding site determination.

Authors:  Brittany L Heath; Rebecca A Jockusch
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-09-05       Impact factor: 3.109

Review 9.  Radical solutions: Principles and application of electron-based dissociation in mass spectrometry-based analysis of protein structure.

Authors:  Frederik Lermyte; Dirk Valkenborg; Joseph A Loo; Frank Sobott
Journal:  Mass Spectrom Rev       Date:  2018-02-09       Impact factor: 10.946

10.  Native electrospray ionization and electron-capture dissociation for comparison of protein structure in solution and the gas phase.

Authors:  Hao Zhang; Weidong Cui; Michael L Gross
Journal:  Int J Mass Spectrom       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 1.986

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.