| Literature DB >> 34539228 |
Luis F Schachner1, Denise P Tran1, Alexander Lee1, John P McGee1, Kevin Jooss1, Kenneth Durbin1, Henrique Dos Santos Seckler1, Lauren Adams1, Erika Cline1, Rafael Melani1, Ashley N Ives1, Benjamin Des Soye1, Neil L Kelleher1, Steven M Patrie1.
Abstract
The combined use of electrospray ionization run in so-called "native mode" with top-down mass spectrometry (nTDMS) is enhancing both structural biology and discovery proteomics by providing three levels of information in a single experiment: the intact mass of a protein or complex, the masses of its subunits and non-covalent cofactors, and fragment ion masses from direct dissociation of subunits that capture the primary sequence and combinations of diverse post-translational modifications (PTMs). While intact mass data are readily deconvoluted using well-known software options, the analysis of fragmentation data that result from a tandem MS experiment - essential for proteoform characterization - is not yet standardized. In this tutorial, we offer a decision-tree for the analysis of nTDMS experiments on protein complexes and diverse bioassemblies. We include an overview of strategies to navigate this type of analysis, provide example data sets, and highlight software for the hypothesis-driven interrogation of fragment ions for localization of PTMs, metals, and cofactors on native proteoforms. Throughout we have emphasized the key features (deconvolution, search mode, validation, other) that the reader can consider when deciding upon their specific experimental and data processing design using both open-access and commercial software.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34539228 PMCID: PMC8445521 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijms.2021.116591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mass Spectrom ISSN: 1387-3806 Impact factor: 1.934