Collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD), ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD), electron capture dissociation and electron detachment dissociation (EDD) experiments were conducted on a set of phosphopeptides, in a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer. The fragmentation patterns were compared and varied according to the fragmentation mechanisms and the composition of the peptides. CAD and IRMPD produced similar fragmentation profiles of the phosphopeptides, while UVPD produced a large number of complementary fragments. Electron-based dissociation techniques displayed lower fragmentation efficiencies, despite retaining the labile phosphate group, and drastically different fragmentation profiles. EDD produced complex spectra whose interpretation proved challenging.
Collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD), ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD), electron capture dissociation and electron detachment dissociation (EDD) experiments were conducted on a set of phosphopeptides, in a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer. The fragmentation patterns were compared and varied according to the fragmentation mechanisms and the composition of the peptides. CAD and IRMPD produced similar fragmentation profiles of the phosphopeptides, while UVPD produced a large number of complementary fragments. Electron-based dissociation techniques displayed lower fragmentation efficiencies, despite retaining the labile phosphate group, and drastically different fragmentation profiles. EDD produced complex spectra whose interpretation proved challenging.
Entities:
Keywords:
characterization; collision activated dissociation; electron capture dissociation; electron detachment dissociation; fragmentation; infrared multiphoton dissociation; phosphopeptide; ultraviolet photodissociation
Phosphorylation is
a posttranslational modification that occurs
predominantly on serine, threonine, and tyrosine amino acid residues.
Noncanonical phosphorylation may occur on other residues such as histidine,
lysine, and arginine through phosphoamidate bonds and on aspartic
acid and glutamic acid through anhydride linkages.[1−5] The phosphoryl group is a labile modification that
can be lost during mass spectrometry experiments, either by the hydrolysis
of the phosphoramidate group by acidic additives frequently added
to aid protonation of the analyte molecules during electrospray or
by the dissociation technique itself. Loss of phosphoric acid (H3PO4) or metaphosphoric acid (HPO3) can
be observed in the positive mode and loss of phosphite (PO3) in the negative mode. When the loss is induced by the fragmentation
techniques, the phosphopeptides can be identified by immonium ions[6−8] or the neutral losses can be used as a signature.[9−11] Other strategies
also allow the identification of phosphopeptides by accurate mass
alone, using the mass defect of the phosphorus-31 isotope, 31P (−0.0262 Da),[12] with the specific
detection of 31P by ICP-MS,[13] or by tagging the phosphate groups.[14] However, the loss of the phosphate from the sequence ions makes
phosphorylation site assignment difficult. The loss depends on the
fragmentation techniques, the charge states of the precursor, the
residue the phosphate is linked to, and the neighboring amino acids.[15,16]During collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), the ions
undergo
multiple collisions with inert gas atoms such as argon, increasing
the internal energy of the precursor ion until a threshold for dissociation
is reached.[17] The fragmentation occurs
via a low energy proton rearrangement resulting in the destabilization
and cleavage of an amide bond (b and y type fragments). The phosphoryl
group is favored as a site for protonation, resulting in the cleavage
of the labile group and a domination of the spectra by the loss of
phosphoric acid (H3PO4). For in-beam CAD in
a collision cell, such as CAD in a triple quadrupole or an FT-ICR
instrument or higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD),[7,18] the collisions are more energetic than resonant-excitation CAD used
in radio frequency quadrupole ion traps,[19] resulting in greater intensities of sequence-informative b, y ions,
compared to the phosphate neutral loss intensities. Evidence of rearrangement
reactions in the gas phase has been exhibited in a broad range of
peptides, under resonant CAD conditions.[20] Furthermore, rearrangement of the phosphoryl group to an alternate
hydroxyl-containing peptide has also been observed.[19] The time scale of the activation could also allow the transfer
of the phosphate group to another residue in resonant CAD experiments.[15]Electron-based fragmentation techniques
are radical-driven dissociation
methods where the labile groups are often retained,[21−23] allowing identification
and localization of the phosphorylation. Electron-capture dissociation
(ECD) involves the capture of a low-energy electron by a multiply
charged precursor cation.[24] Fragmentation
of the N–Cα bond of the peptide backbone produces predominantly
c- and z-type product ions. Electron-detachment dissociation (EDD)
consists of the use of electrons with kinetic energies above 10 eV
to detach electrons from a negatively charged precursor in negative-mode
analysis.[25] The negative charges are located
at the amide nitrogen bond along the backbone, producing a•/x fragments, or at the amino acid side chain, producing neutral
losses.[26,27] Fragmentation efficiency and sequence coverage
with electron-based techniques are lower when a peptide is phosphorylated.[28,29] On phosphopeptides with basic residues, the phosphate group can
exist in a deprotonated form and can form salt bridges with protonated
side chains.[30,31] Salt bridges are electrostatic
interactions between amino acids of different charges.[32] These strong noncovalent bonds stabilize the
phosphopeptide ion, and additional electron energy is therefore necessary
to dissociate it.[33−35] Basic residues are common around phosphorylation
sites, suggesting that salt bridges could be part of their formation.[36]Different lasers can be used to dissociate
ions. In infrared multiphoton
dissociation (IRMPD),[37−39] ions are irradiated using a CO2 laser.
The sequential absorption of 10.6 μm photons increases the internal
energy of ions (0.117 eV per photon) until dissociation occurs. It
is a slow heating method, similar to CAD, and the energy is distributed
throughout the peptide, resulting in bond cleavage at the weakest
points (b and y fragments, labile posttranslational modifications).[40,41] Infrared (IR) radiation is resonant with the phosphate vibrational
modes of the phosphorylated peptide,[42,43] leading to
enhanced fragmentation of phosphopeptides.[44−47] Ultraviolet photodissociation
(UVPD) at 193 nm deposits the required energy for dissociation within
the absorption of a single photon[48] (6.4
eV per photon) emitted through a nanosecond-scale laser pulse.[49] The peptide absorbs the high-energy photon at
the chromophore and the protein backbone amide group,[50] accessing many dissociation pathways, leading to the generation
of a/x, b/y, and c/z complementary ion pairs.[51,52] The fast fragmentation of the peptide reduces the frequency of phosphate
group loss.[53]The 12 T solariX FT-ICR
mass spectrometer is a versatile instrument.
CAD fragmentation is possible in the front end. The addition of lasers
allows fragmentation via IRMPD and UVPD in the ICR cell.[54,55] Finally, the hollow beam electrode allows ExD fragmentation. CAD,
IRMPD, UVPD, ECD, and EDD fragmentation of a phosphoserine, a phosphothreonine,
and a phosphotyrosine peptide were conducted and compared in this
paper.
Methods
MS Phosphomix 1 and 2 lights were obtained
from Sigma-Aldrich (MSP1L-1VL
and MSP2L-1VL). Water was purified by a Millipore Direct-Q purification
system (Merck Millipore, MA). Acetonitrile was obtained from VWR chemicals
(CAS: 75-05-8). Formic acid (FA) was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (CAS:
64-18-6). The Phosphomix were diluted into 80:20 water/ACN + 0.1%
FA, and the final concentration of the peptides was 0.2 μM.The samples were ionized using a custom nano electrospray ionization
source (nESI). A 10–20 μL portion of sample was loaded
into a pulled glass capillary tip with a several micrometer open orifice[56] and analyzed with a 12 T Bruker solariX FTICR
mass spectrometer (Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Bremen, Germany). The applied
capillary voltage was 500 V.For CAD, argon was used as the
neutral collision gas (∼7
× 10–6 mbar). Ions were isolated in the quadrupole,
accumulated, and fragmented in the collision cell with an optimized
collision potential and then analyzed in the infinity cell.[55]For ECD, IRMPD, and UVPD, the peptides
were isolated in the quadrupole,
accumulated in the collision cell, and transferred into the ICR cell
where the ions were fragmented, excited, and detected.For ECD,
ions were irradiated with electrons from a 1.5 A indirectly
heated hollow cathode by applying a bias voltage of 1.2 V. Below 1.2
V, no fragmentation was observed. Various pulse lengths were applied,
and the best spectra are shown in the figures. Higher and lower pulse
lengths than the optimized ones occurred, and the lower number of
sequence ions is shown. IRMPD fragmentation was achieved using a continuous
wave, 25 W, CO2 laser (Synrad Inc., Mulkiteo, WA). UVPD
was performed using a 193 nm excimer laser (ExciStar XS Coherent,
500 Hz). Ions were irradiated with a varying number of shots with
a pulse energy of 5 mJ (measured at laser output).RDSLGpTYSSR
was quadrupole isolated at m/z 612.5
± 4, and the acquired mass-to-charge ratio
range was m/z 147.4–3000.
EVQAEQPSSpSSPR was quadrupole isolated at m/z 741.0 ± 4, and the acquired mass-to-charge
ratio range was m/z 98.3–3000.
VIEDNEpYTAR was quadrupole isolated at m/z 647.0 ± 10, and the acquired mass-to-charge ratio
range was m/z 98.3–1300.
The mass spectrometer was tuned to get the best signal for each spectrum,
and data was acquired at different fragmentation parameters. The spectra
with the best fragmentation efficiency, with a high number of sequence
ions, low internal fragmentation, and phosphate loss, are shown in
this paper and compared. Data points (4 M, 2,[22] 22-bit) were acquired for each spectrum. For CAD, IRMPD, and UVPD
100 scans were averaged, for ECD 200 scans, and for EDD 500 scans
to achieve a desirable signal-to-noise ratio. The data was internally
calibrated using known fragment peaks with a quadratic calibration
function in the Bruker DataAnalysis v4.3 software (Bruker Daltonics
GmbH, Bremen, Germany).
Results
Fragmentation spectra of
doubly charged RDSLGpTYSSR are shown
in Figure . CAD and
IRMPD spectra show high similarities and have similar fragmentation
profiles. Both fragmentation techniques localized the phosphorylation
site at the threonine. The highest intensity sequence ions were b2
for IRMPD and y4 for both fragmentation techniques, demonstrating
preferential cleavage at DS and pTY linkages. RDSLGpTYSSR
is composed of two basic arginine residues, which sequestered the
two ionizing protons. Therefore, no mobile proton and no charge delocalization
occurred, making the charge-remote dissociation channels competitive.
The peptide dissociates selectively at the C-terminus of the two acidic
residues (aspartic acid and phosphothreonine) as shown in previous
fragmentation studies.[41,57,58]
Figure 1
(A)
CAD, (B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD fragmentation of RDSLGpTYSSR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams. On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively.
(A)
CAD, (B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD fragmentation of RDSLGpTYSSR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams. On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively.Cleavage between the
R and D residues was not observed. Neutral
loss of H3PO4 was prominent with CAD and IRMPD
(27.4% and 83.7% respectively, in the [M + 2H – H3PO4]2+/[M + 2H]2+ ratio), and CAD
also produced loss of HPO3 (0.2% [M + 2H – HPO3]2+/[M + 2H]2+). Fragments with water
losses (′ refers to loss of water) were observed: y5–9′,
b7–9′ for CAD and y5–7′ and b7′
for IRMPD, representing 10.0% and 3.8%, respectively, of the identified
sequence ion intensities. However, the fragments have their phosphorylated
counterpart, and the phosphorylation site is easily identified on
the threonine. Both fragmentation techniques produced internal fragments
identified as C19H9N5O3+ for CAD and IRMPD (∼−0.17 ppm for both)
and C19H11N5O4+ for CAD (−0.07 ppm). The percentage of internal fragments
and rearrangements (the percentage of unknown peaks and internal fragments
compared to the total ion intensity) was 3.5% for CAD and 25.6% for
IRMPD with the prominence of C19H9N5O3 in the IRMPD spectrum.For peptides with no mobile
proton, it has been shown that the
hydrogen bond between the phosphate group and the protonated arginine
residue can lead to the gas-phase rearrangement of the phosphate to
a different residue.[19] However, no ions
resulting from such rearrangement were observed in the spectra (y2,
y3, and y4 with phosphate).UVPD produced a large number of
complementary fragments, leading
to 100% cleavage coverage. The fragmentation profile shows high intensity
fragments originating from the DS linkage. UVPD did not dissociate
selectively at the pTY linkage compared to the slow heating techniques.UVPD produced an internal fragment assigned as C19H9N5O3 (−0.17 ppm), and 28.3% of
the intensity of the peaks observed were due to internal fragmentation
(the high percentage is due to the unidentified high intensity m/z 593.15759). UVPD lost less of the phosphate
group from the precursor (9.0%) than the slow heating methods, but
more of the identified fragments were dephosphorylated (17.5%). However,
the phosphorylated sequence ions allowed the identification of the
phosphorylated site at the threonine.The ECD fragmentation
profiles show more homogeneous fragmentation
through the backbone of the peptide, leading to 100% cleavage coverage.
No selective cleavage was observed compared to the other techniques.
There was no loss of phosphate from the precursor or the fragments,
permitting the identification of the phosphorylation site at the threonine.
Starting from a similar precursor intensity, prior to fragmentation,
ECD required the accumulation of more scans than the other fragmentation
techniques due to fragment peaks being observed with lower intensities
(between ∼2 to 5 times lower). This phenomenon is expected
with ECD fragmentation but is also possibly enhanced by the phosphorylation.Fragmentation spectra of the doubly charged EVQAEQPSSpSSPR
are shown in Figure . CAD and IRMPD techniques produced similar fragmentation profiles,
with high abundance complementary fragments arising from the EQ (py8/b5)
and QP (py7/b6) cleavages. The glutamic acid residue has been shown
to produce similar selective fragmentation to asparagine.[59] With slow heating methods, the high gas-phase
basicity of the proline compared to the other residues with alkyl
side chains enhances the dissociation of the amide bond at the N-terminus
side.[60] As expected, the dominant fragment
ion in the CAD and IRMPD spectra was the y fragment between the Q
and P residues (denoted py7 because it is a phosphorylated y7 ion).
Figure 2
(A) CAD,
(B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD fragmentation of EVQAEQPSSpSSPR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams. On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively.
(A) CAD,
(B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD fragmentation of EVQAEQPSSpSSPR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams. On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively.The slow heating techniques
produced limited fragments at the QA
and AE linkage and very low fragmentation with PSSpSSEPR. Fragment
with EV cleavages were not identified. With both fragmentation techniques,
H3PO4 losses were identified at the precursor,
as well as loss of one, two, or three H2O. Fragments with
phosphate losses are observed: y5–9′, b7–9′
for CAD and y5–7′, b7′ for IRMPD, representing
10.0% and 3.8%, respectively, of the identified sequence ion intensities.
However, the fragments have their phosphorylated counterpart, and
the phosphorylation site is easily identified on the serine.UVPD resulted in fragmentation at every backbone linkage, with
complementary fragments, leading to 100% cleavage coverage and the
most complete fragmentation for this peptide. Most of the fragments
have less than half of the mass of the precursor, charged at one of
the extremities of the peptide. There was lower fragmentation at EV
and PSSpSSPR.The ECD fragmentation data only shows fragments
from the C-terminus.
The proton captured the electron, and the only charge left was the
one sequestered at the C-terminus arginine.The C-terminus (SPR)
was not fragmented. Some z fragments were
found with a side chain loss corresponding to C3H5NO (pw9,11–13) likely from the glutamine residues.[61] Four y fragments were produced (py7–8,10–11).
The percentage of unidentified internal fragments or rearrangements
(14.7%) for ECD is similar to the percentages for CAD, IRMPD, and
UVPD (15.6%, 25.6%, and 17.7%) and arise mostly from neutral losses
of the electron capture species. Fragments with loss of the phosphate
group were found (z8–12′) at unexpectedly higher percentage
intensities (23.6%) than with CAD (4.5%), IRMPD (7.0%), and UVPD (19.3%).
MS/MS of EVQAEQPSSpSSPR with ECD gave low-intensity fragments
suggesting an inner stabilization of the peptide.Despite its
mobile proton, and the proline residue at the C-terminus
of the peptide, the doubly charged EVQAEQPSSpSSPR has
low fragmentation efficiency at PSSpSSPR around the site of the phosphorylation,
in all spectra with all dissociation techniques. In addition, the
neutral loss of H3PO4 from the precursor was
low with all techniques (respectively 4.7%, 1.7%, 0%, and 0.4% for
CAD, IRMPD, ECD, and UVPD in the [M + 2H – H3PO4]2+/[M + 2H]2+ ratio), compared to the
loss in the two other model peptides, and there was no loss of HPO3 with any of the fragmentation techniques. These two observations,
and the ECD fragmentation behavior, suggest an inner stabilization
that could be due to a strong hydrogen-bonding interaction between
the phosphoserine and the protonated arginine residue.[33,35] The use of activated ion ECD, with the simultaneous irradiation
of the IR laser, could potentially separate the ECD ions which are
held together by a hydrogen bond, testing this hypothesis.[54,62]EVQAEQPSSpSSPR was fragmented in the negative mode via electron-detachment
dissociation (EDD). Low intensity a• and x fragments
were observed in the spectra (Figure ), as well as neutral losses (CO2, C2H5O, CH2O). The labile phosphate was
not cleaved from the precursor or the fragments. Despite the low fragmentation
efficiency, the ions gave sequence information localizing the phosphorylation
between the third and fourth serine.
Figure 3
EDD fragmentation of EVQAEQPSSpSSPR.
p: fragment with
phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. Swirl: harmonics. Only
fragments without neutral losses are shown on the cleavage diagrams.
On the fragmentation intensity profiles, black and gray represent
the summed percentages of abc and xyz, respectively.
EDD fragmentation of EVQAEQPSSpSSPR.
p: fragment with
phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. Swirl: harmonics. Only
fragments without neutral losses are shown on the cleavage diagrams.
On the fragmentation intensity profiles, black and gray represent
the summed percentages of abc and xyz, respectively.The fragmentation profile shows a high intensity fragment
arising
from the EV cleavage (px12). This data is consistent with the electron–hole
recombination phenomenon,[25] where the loss
of the electron produces a radical with a positive charge, mobile
via Coulombic attraction on the backbone, and neutralized at a negative
amino acid such as the glutamic acid (E).The tuning for EDD was more
challenging than for the other fragmentation techniques. With CAD,
IRMPD, ECD, and UVPD, most of the acquired spectra showed the same
product ions and fragmentation profiles, with different results when
reaching extreme parameters. For EDD, optimal data was obtained for
EVQAEQPSSpSSPR using a bias voltage of 25.2 V and pulse
length of 0.5 s. Some fragments were not observed at 25 and 25.4 V
bias or at 25.2 V with pulse lengths of 0.3 or 0.4 s. This narrow
tuning window demonstrates the difficulty of the fragmentation tuning
but also the complexity of the EDD mechanism.[63] EDD required more averaged scans to get good signal-to-noise ratio
(500 scans). Furthermore, the fragmentation of RDSLGpTYSSR and
VIEDNEpYTAR led to complex spectra with mostly unidentified
fragments. Only px9, px8, and px7 were identified for RDSLGpTYSSR
(data not shown).Fragmentation spectra of doubly charged VIEDNEpYTAR
are shown
in Figure .CAD, IRMPD
and UVPD displayed similar fragmentation profiles with selective dissociation
at the IE linkage. a2, b2, py8, and/or py8′ fragments were
detected at high intensities in the three spectra. The dominant fragment
ions are observed to arise from cleavage reactions at the N-terminus
of the glutamic acid. The peptide contains three acidic residues (2xE
and D), and surprisingly, the selective fragmentation was detected
at the glutamic acid residue only.
Figure 4
(A) CAD, (B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD
fragmentation of VIEDNEpYTAR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively. All four spectra are on the same horizontal scale.
(A) CAD, (B) IRMPD, (C) ECD, and (D) UVPD
fragmentation of VIEDNEpYTAR.
p: fragment with phosphate attached. ′: loss of water. ′′:
loss of two water molecules. Only fragments without neutral losses
are shown on the cleavage diagrams On the fragmentation intensity
profiles, black and gray represent the summed percentages of abc and
xyz, respectively. All four spectra are on the same horizontal scale.The C-terminus arginine sequestered one of the
protons and the
electron was captured by the proton, resulting in most of the ECD
fragments containing the C-terminus. The central part of the peptide,
where all the acidic residues were located, was more prone to fragmentation
than the extremities of the peptide. Neutral losses from the electron-capture
species such as CO2Phosphotyrosine cannot undergo
the direct loss of H3PO4 or HPO3 from
the precursor, via β-elimination
reaction. VIEDNEpYTAR spectra (Figure ) displayed no loss of the phosphate group
from the precursor, and there is no fragment suggesting the transfer
of the phosphate. CAD and ECD spectra contain no fragment that would
indicate a loss of phosphate. Laser fragmentation techniques produced
low-intensity fragments with a loss of phosphate: 0.4% for IRMPD and
2.2% for UVPD of the intensity of the identified fragments y4, y4′,
y6′, y6″, and y8′ for IRMPD and y4, y4′,
y6, and y6′ for UVPD, which is lower than for the other peptides.
Phosphotyrosine is less common than phosphoserine and phosphothreonine.[15]The percentages of internal fragments
or rearrangements are 3.1%,
5.7%, and 11.5% for CAD, IRMPD, and UVPD, which are lower than for
RDSLGpTYSSR and EVQAEQPSSpSSPR. RDSLGpTYSSR
showed the higher internal fragmentation percentages due to the high
intensities of its two main internal fragments, and EVQAEQPSSpSSPR
showed higher neutral and side-chain losses than the two other peptides.
CAD, IRMPD, and ECD produced 100% cleavage coverage, while the UVPD
did not cleave at the VI linkage.
Discussion
FT-ICR
mass spectrometers are versatile instruments where multiple
fragmentation techniques can be implemented and compared. For the
characterization of the three selected phosphopeptides, the two slow
heating methods (CAD and IRMPD) produced similar fragmentation profiles
with very little variation between the spectra. With the IRMPD technique,
the fragments remain in the laser beam during the irradiation time
and can be further fragmented; therefore, higher percentages of internal
fragments are detected in the IRMPD spectra than the CAD spectra of
the three peptides. These two fragmentation techniques can be distinguished
by different characteristics. First, in the design of the instrument,
the CAD fragmentation occurs in the collision cell at the front end
of the mass spectrometer, and the IRMPD fragmentation occurs in the
ICR cell. Second, it has been shown that the phosphopeptide fragment
via IRMPD dissociation occurs at a much lower threshold than its unphosphorylated
counterparts.[46,47] These two characteristics of
IRMPD fragmentation compared to CAD can be useful; for example, IRMPD
can be used to perform a two-dimensional mass spectrometry (2DMS)
analysis of a phosphoproteomic sample.[11] It is also possible to perform sustained off-resonance irradiation
collisionally activated dissociation (SORI-CAD) in the ICR cell; however,
in-cell fragmentation requires an increase in pressure and therefore
reduces the resolving power of the experiment.UVPD fragmentation
produced a lot of complementary fragments. No
significant variation of fragmentation efficiency was detected between
the phosphoserine, phosphothreonine, and phosphotyrosine peptides.
Selective fragmentation at the N-terminus of proline and around the
acidic amino acid residues was observed in the CAD, IRMPD, and UVPD
spectra, especially when the protons were immobilized. In these cases,
competing fragmentation channels are discriminated against. Selective
cleavages were observed with UVPD in peptides 1 and 3. A high-energy
photon can cause dissociation via three pathways: the absorption leads
to an electron shifting to an electronic excited state, breaking a
bond into two radicals, one hot, one cold. The hot radical is beyond
the threshold of dissociation resulting in direct cleavage. The cold
radical undergoes radical rearrangements similar to ECD, and internal
conversion of the electronic energy to vibrational modes results in
even-electron fragmentation similar to CAD. These latter even-electron
fragmentations lead to selective cleavages The phosphotyrosine peptide
had a UVPD fragmentation profile similar to that of the slow-heating
methods such as CAD and IRMPD, while the UVPD fragmentation profiles
of the phosphoserine and phosphothreonine peptides had patterns of
all of the ECD, CAD, and IRMPD profiles. This difference is likely
due to the nature of the phosphorylated amino acid, which is a UV
chromophore. The use of electron-based fragmentation techniques did
not show selective dissociation, as expected, but was less effective
in the fragmentation of the phosphopeptides. Despite the more homogeneous
fragmentation profile, and the ability to retain the labile phosphorylation,
ECD produced lower intensity fragments, and rearrangements, due to
an inner stabilization caused by the phosphorylation. EDD fragmentation
in the negative mode produced unidentified fragments and difficult
spectra to interpret, leading to low sequence information.CAD,
IRMPD, ECD, and UVPD produced complementary sequence information
and permitted the localization of the phosphate group. No phosphate
transfer between the phosphoamino acid residue and another amino acid
residue of the peptide were detected. The cleavage coverage was around
100% for all spectra with exceptions relating to the composition of
the peptides more than the ability of the fragmentation techniques.
Authors: Maciej Modzel; Daniel T Weltz Wollenberg; Morten Beck Trelle; Martin R Larsen; Thomas J D Jørgensen Journal: Anal Chem Date: 2020-12-09 Impact factor: 6.986
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