Literature DB >> 29127569

Cooperative Formation of Icosahedral Proline Clusters from Dimers.

Alexander D Jacobs1, K V Jovan Jose1, Rachel Horness1, Krishnan Raghavachari1, Megan C Thielges1, David E Clemmer2.   

Abstract

Ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) techniques were combined with quantum chemical calculations to examine the origin of icosahedral clusters of the amino acid proline. When enantiopure proline solutions are electrosprayed (using nanospray) from 100 mM ammonium acetate, only three peaks are observed in the mass spectrum across a concentration range of five orders of magnitude: a monomer [Pro+H]+ species, favored from 0.001 to 0.01 mM proline concentrations; a dimer [2Pro+H]+ species, the most abundant species for proline concentrations above 0.01 mM; and, the dimer and dodecamer [12Pro+2H]2+ for 1.0 mM and more concentrated proline solutions. Electrospraying racemic D/L-proline solutions from 100 mM ammonium acetate leads to a monomer at low proline concentrations (0.001 to 0.1 mM), and a dimer at higher concentrations (>0.09 mM), as well as a very small population of 8 to 15 Pro clusters that comprise <0.1% of the total ion signals even at the highest proline concentration. Solution FTIR studies show unique features that increase in intensity in the enantiopure proline solutions, consistent with clustering, presumably from the icosahedral geometry in bulk solution. When normalized for the total proline, these results are indicative of a cooperative formation of the enantiopure 12Pro species from 2Pro. Graphical Abstract.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cooperativity; Ion mobility spectrometry; Proline clusters

Year:  2017        PMID: 29127569      PMCID: PMC6884317          DOI: 10.1007/s13361-017-1833-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom        ISSN: 1044-0305            Impact factor:   3.109


  45 in total

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