Literature DB >> 22780199

Capillary and Coulombic effects on the gas phase structure of electrosprayed concanavalin A ions and its clusters C(n)(+z) (n = 1-6).

J Fernandez de la Mora1, R Borrajo-Pelaez, M Zurita-Gotor.   

Abstract

Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) is used to study the gas phase collision cross section Ω(z, n) in CO(2) of multimers C(n) (n = 1-4, 6) of concanavalin A, whose tetramer C(4) has a crystal structure resembling four tetrahedrically arranged globules. C(n)(+z) ions electrosprayed from aqueous solutions of triethylammonium formate (Et(3)AF) are moderately charged (up to z = 6 and 17 for n = 1 and 6) and produce narrow mobility peaks. Charge states down to z = 1 obtained with a charge-reducing radioactive (63)Ni source are studied for the dimer and the tetramer via pure IMS (no MS). The mobilities are independent of pH in the range 6-8, controlled by addition of triethylamine to the Et(3)AF. The measured compactness group Ω(z, n)/n(2/3) is practically independent of n and z, whereas mobility calculations with clusters of touching spheres show that it should vary with n by 20-30% for a variety of scattering models. This contrast suggests that, irrespective of ambiguities on the scattering model, all multimers adopt globular shapes, precluding in particular a tetrahedral tetramer. Acetic acid solutions (87 mM aqueous) yield ions with substantially higher z, mostly with broad mobility distributions. Exceptionally high z tetramers (z = 25-29) and trimers have narrowly defined mobilities with compact but nonspherical shapes. Addition of 2-4 mM Et(3)AF to the 87 mM aqueous acetic acid solution yields narrowly defined mobilities almost identical at all z values to those from the Et(3)AF buffer, although with higher charge states showing also a transition to nonspherical shapes. We conclude that all gas phase clusters charged below a Rayleigh-like charge, z(R), are globular without regard to solution conditions, some undergoing a sharp shape transition at a critical z = z(R). We confirm that gas phase protein cross sections differ from those expected from the crystal structure, with a trend to compact probably driven by their high surface energy (and opposed by Coulombic stresses). The Rayleigh-like shape transitions seen are similar to those arising in linear homopolymers, although not as sharply defined. They yield a surface energy for protein matter almost as high as the surface tension of water. This quantitative conclusion is corroborated by prior data on cytochrome c and apomyoglobin (also showing a critical shape transition) as well as measurements of the maximum charge versus mass in aggregates of dipeptides.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22780199     DOI: 10.1021/jp210693z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  2 in total

1.  Why do GroEL ions exhibit two gas phase conformers?

Authors:  Juan Fernandez de la Mora
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-10-06       Impact factor: 3.109

2.  Measuring the effect of ion-induced drift-gas polarization on the electrical mobilities of multiply-charged ionic liquid nanodrops in air.

Authors:  Juan Fernández-García; Juan Fernández de la Mora
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2013-09-19       Impact factor: 3.109

  2 in total

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