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1.
Site-specific analysis of protein glycosylation is important for biochemical and clinical research efforts. Glycopeptide analysis using liquid chromatography-collision-induced dissociation/electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry (LC-CID/ETD-MS) allows simultaneous characterization of the glycan structure and attached peptide site. However, due to the low ionization efficiency of glycopeptides during electrospray ionization, 200-500 fmol of sample per injection is needed for a single LC-MS run, which makes it challenging for the analysis of limited amounts of glycoprotein purified from biological matrixes. To improve the sensitivity of LC-MS analysis for glycopeptides, an ultranarrow porous layer open tubular (PLOT) LC column (2.5 m × 10 μm i.d.) was coupled to a linear ion trap (LTQ) collision-induced dissociation/electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometer to provide sensitive analysis of N-linked protein glycosylation heterogeneity. The potential of the developed method is demonstrated by the characterization of site-specific glycosylation using haptoglobin (Hpt) as a model protein. To limit the amount of haptoglobin to low picomole amounts of protein, we affinity purified it from 1 μL of pooled lung cancer patient plasma. A total of 26 glycoforms/glycan compositions on three Hpt tryptic glycopeptides were identified and quantified from 10 LC-MS runs with a consumption of 100 fmol of Hpt digest (13 ng of protein, 10 fmol per injection). Included in this analysis was the determination of the glycan occupancy level. At this sample consumption level, the high sensitivity of the PLOT LC-LTQ-CID/ETD-MS system allowed glycopeptide identification and structure determination, along with relative quantitation of glycans presented on the same peptide backbone, even for low abundant glycopeptides at the ~100 amol level. The PLOT LC-MS system is shown to have sufficient sensitivity to allow characterization of site-specific protein glycosylation from trace levels of glycosylated proteins.  相似文献   

2.
This work explores the use of 20-microm-i.d. polymeric polystyrene-divinylbenzene monolithic nanocapillary columns for the LC-ESI-MS analysis of tryptic digest peptide mixtures. In contrast to the packing of microparticles, capillary columns were prepared, without the need of high pressure, in fused-silica capillaries, by thermally induced in situ copolymerization of styrene and divinylbenzene. The polymerization conditions and mobile-phase composition were optimized for chromatographic performance leading to efficiencies over 100000 plates/m for peptide separations. High mass sensitivity (approximately 10 amol of peptides) in the MS and MS/MS modes using an ion trap MS was found, a factor of up to 20-fold improvement over 75-microm-i.d. nanocolumns. A wide linear dynamic range (approximately 4 orders of magnitude) was achieved, and good run-to-run and column-to-column reproducibility of isocratic and gradient elution separations were found. As samples, both model proteins and tissue extracts were employed. Gradient nano-LC-MS analysis of a proteolytic digest of a tissue extract, equivalent to a sample size of approximately 1000 cells injected, is presented.  相似文献   

3.
Following on our recent work, on-line one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) porous layer open tubular/liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (PLOT/LC-ESI-MS) platforms using 3.2 mx10 microm i.d. poly(styrene-divinylbenzene) (PS-DVB) PLOT columns have been developed to provide robust, high-performance, and ultrasensitive proteomic analysis. With the use of a PicoClear tee, the dead volume connection between a 50 microm i.d. PS-DVB monolithic micro-SPE column and the PLOT column was minimized. The micro-SPE/PLOT column assembly provided a separation performance similar to that obtained with direct injection onto the PLOT column at a mobile phase flow rate of 20 nL/min. The trace analysis potential of the platform was evaluated using an in-gel tryptic digest sample of a gel fraction (15-40 kDa) of a cervical cancer (SiHa) cell line. As an example of the sensitivity of the system, approximately 2.5 ng of protein in 2 microL of solution, an amount corresponding to 20 SiHa cells, was subjected to on-line micro-SPE-PLOT/LC-ESI-MS/MS analysis using a linear ion trap MS. A total of 237 peptides associated with 163 unique proteins were identified from a single analysis when using stringent criteria associated with a false positive rate of less than 1%. The number of identified peptides and proteins increased to 638 and 343, respectively, as the injection amount was raised to approximately 45 ng of protein, an amount corresponding to 350 SiHa cells. In comparison, only 338 peptides and 231 unique proteins were identified (false positive rate again less than 1%) from 750 ng of protein from the identical gel fraction, an amount corresponding to 6000 SiHa cells, using a typical 15 cmx75 microm i.d. packed capillary column. The greater sensitivity, higher recovery, and higher resolving power of the PLOT column resulted in the increased number of identifications from only approximately 5% of the injected sample amount. The resolving power of the micro-SPE/PLOT assembly was further extended by 2D chromatography via combination of the high-efficiency reversed-phase PLOT column with strong cation-exchange chromatography (SCX). As an example, 1071 peptides associated with 536 unique proteins were identified from 75 ng of protein from the same gel fraction, an amount corresponding to 600 cells, using five ion-exchange fractions in on-line 2D SCX-PLOT/LC-MS. The 2D system, implemented in an automated format, led to simple and robust operation for proteomic analysis. These promising results demonstrate the potential of the PLOT column for ultratrace analysis.  相似文献   

4.
We describe the preparation and performance of high-efficiency 70 cm x 20 microm i.d. silica-based monolithic capillary LC columns. The monolithic columns at a mobile-phase pressure of 5000 psi provide flow rates of approximately 40 nL/min at a linear velocity of approximately 0.24 cm/s. The columns provide a separation peak capacity of approximately 420 in conjunction with both on-line coupling with microsolid-phase extraction and nanoelectrospray ionization-mass spectrometry. Performance was evaluated using a Shewanella oneidensis tryptic digest, and approximately 15-amol detection limits for peptides were obtained using a conventional ion trap and MS/MS for peptide identification. The sensitivity and separation efficiency enabled the identification of 2367 different peptides covering 855 distinct S. oneidensis proteins from a 2.5-microg tryptic digest sample in a single 10-h analysis. The number of identified peptides and proteins approximately doubled when the effective separation time was extended from 200 to 600 min. The number of identified peptides increased from 32 to 390 as the injection amount was increased from 0.5 to 100 ng. Both the run-to-run and column-to-column reproducibility for proteomic analyses were also evaluated.  相似文献   

5.
Young JB  Li L 《Analytical chemistry》2007,79(15):5927-5934
An automated off-line liquid chromatography-matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (LC-MALDI) interface capable of coupling both capillary and microbore LC separations with MALDI mass spectrometry (MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) has been developed. The interface is a combination of two concepts: analyte concentration from heated hanging droplets and impulse-driven droplet deposition of LC fractions onto a MALDI sample plate. At room temperature the interface allows the coupling of capillary LC separations (i.e., flow rate of <5 microL/min) with MALDI MS. With heating, it can be used to combine microbore LC operated at a relatively high flow rate of up to 50 microL/min with MALDI MS. The collected fractions can be analyzed by MALDI MS and MS/MS instruments, such as time-of-flight (TOF) and quadrupole-TOF MS. Performance of the interface was examined using several peptide and protein standards. It was shown that, using MALDI-TOF MS, [GLU1]-fibrinopeptide B could be detected with a total injection amount of 5 fmol to microbore LC. Chromatographic performance was also monitored. A peak width of 12 s at half-height for [GLU1]-fibrinopeptide B showed no evidence of band broadening due to the interface. The ability of the interface to mitigate ion suppression was studied using a mixture of 100 fmol of [GLU1]-fibrinopeptide B and 10 pmol of cytochrome c tryptic digest. Although fully suppressed under direct MALDI conditions, LC-MALDI analysis was able to detect the 100 fmol peptide with 10 s fraction collection. Finally, the ability to inject relatively large sample amounts to improve detectability of low-abundance peptides was illustrated in the analysis of phosphopeptides from alpha-casein tryptic digests. A digest loaded on column to 2.4 microg and analyzed by LC-MALDI MS/MS resulted in 82% sequence coverage and detection of all nine phosphoserine residues. It is concluded that, being able to handle both high- and low-flow LC separations, the impulse-driven heated-droplet interface provides the flexibility to carry out MALDI analysis of peptides and proteins depending on the information sought after, analysis speed, and sample size.  相似文献   

6.
We describe approaches for proteomics analysis using electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry coupled with fast reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) separations. The RPLC separations used 50-microm-i.d. fused-silica capillaries packed with submicrometer-sized C18-bonded porous silica particles and achieved peak capacities of 130-420 for analytes from proteome tryptic digests. When these separations were combined with linear ion trap tandem mass spectrometry measurements, approximately 1000 proteins could be identified in 50 min from approximately 4000 identified tryptic peptides; approximately 550 proteins in 20 min from approximately 1800 peptides; and approximately 250 proteins in 8 min from approximately 700 peptides for a S. oneidensis tryptic digest. The dynamic range for protein identification with the fast separations was determined to be approximately 3-4 orders of magnitude of relative protein abundance on the basis of known proteins in human blood plasma analyses. We found that 55% of the MS/MS spectra acquired during the entire analysis (and up to 100% of the MS/MS spectra acquired from the most data-rich zone) provided sufficient quality for identifying peptides. The results confirm that such analyses using very fast (minutes) RPLC separations based on columns packed with microsized porous particles are primarily limited by the MS/MS analysis speed.  相似文献   

7.
The formation of multiply charged molecular ions via the field-assisted ion evaporation mechanism during electrospray ionization enables the use of an atmospheric pressure ionization quadrupole mass spectrometer system for characterizing biologically important peptides. The straightforward implementation of high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) into this new strategy to determine the molecular weight of tryptic peptides via the pneumatically assisted electrospray (ion spray) interface is presented. Examples utilizing both microbore (1.0 mm) and standard bore (4.6 mm) inside diameter columns are shown for the LC/MS molecular weight determination of tryptic peptides in methionyl-human growth hormone (met-hGH). Injected levels from 50 to 75 pmol of tryptic digest onto 1 mm i.d. HPLC columns provided full-scan LC/MS or LC/MS/MS results without postcolumn splitting of the effluent. When standard 4.6 mm i.d. HPLC columns were used, a 20:1 postcolumn split was utilized, which required from 1 to 5 nmol of injected tryptic digest for full-scan LC/MS or LC/MS/MS results. Collision-induced dissociation (CID) mass spectra resulting from either "infusion" or on-line LC/MS/MS analysis of the abundant doubly charged ions that predominate for tryptic peptides under electrospray conditions provided structurally useful sequence information for met-hGH and human hemoglobin tryptic digests. The slower mass spectrometer scan rate used during infusion of sample provides more accurate mass assignments than on-line LC/MS or LC/MS/MS, but the latter on-line experiments preclude ambiguities caused by matrix or component interferences. However, in some instances very weak CID product ions preclude complete tryptic peptide structural characterization based upon the CID data alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
A novel nebulizer (nDS-200) working at sample uptake rates of less than 500 nL min(-1) was developed for a sheathless interfacing of nanoHPLC (75-microm column i.d.) with ICPMS. It was based on a hollow fused-silica needle of which the tip (i.d. 10 microm, o.d. 20 microm) centered in a 254-microm-i.d. sapphire orifice. The nebulizer, equipped with a 3-cm(3) drain-free vaporization chamber, enabled a stable introduction into an ICP of aqueous mobile phases containing up to 95% acetonitrile at eluent flow rates between 50 and 450 nL min(-1). The low dead volume of the interface resulted in a peak width of 1.3 s (at half-height) and the entirely preserved chromatographic resolution. An example application of the coupling to the analysis of a tryptic digest of a SIP18 protein containing two to nine selenomethionine residues was described. The absolute detection limit was 25 fg (80Se), which allowed the detection of low-abundant selenopeptides at the femtomole level. In contrast to electrospray MS, the ICPMS detection in nanoHPLC is unaffected by the coeluting matrix and concomitant compounds and offers an elegant method for the detection and quantification of minor heteroelement-containing species prior to or in parallel with ESI MS analysis.  相似文献   

9.
Procedures for the reduced-scale analysis of proteins by peptide mapping have been developed, allowing peptide maps to be obtained from picomole to femtomole quantities of protein. The use of trypsin immobilized on agarose gel and placed in a small reactor column has made it possible to reproducibility digest as little as 50 ng of protein. This represents a decrease in sample size of approximately 3 orders of magnitude from conventional tryptic digestion schemes. Separations of tryptic digests were accomplished by using either microcolumn high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE). Separations of 100 ng (4 pmol) of tryptic digest samples of beta-casein were achieved with microcolumn HPLC, while separations of approximately 2 ng (80 fmol) of beta-casein tryptic digest (from a total sample size of 50 ng) were possible with CZE. Peptide maps from phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms of beta-casein were readily distinguishable using both separation methods, demonstrating an ability to detect a single amino acid modification in a protein. Relative standard deviations of peak retention or migration times were less than 3% for microcolumn HPLC and less than 1% for CZE.  相似文献   

10.
The ability to manipulate and effectively utilize small proteomic samples is important for analyses using liquid chromatography (LC) in combination with mass spectrometry (MS) and becomes more challenging for very low flow rates due to extra column volume effects on separation quality. Here we report on the use of commercial switching valves (150-microm channels) for implementing the on-line coupling of capillary LC columns operated at 10,000 psi with relatively large solid-phase extraction (SPE) columns. With the use of optimized column connections, switching modes, and SPE column dimensions, high-efficiency on-line SPE-capillary and nanoscale LC separations were obtained demonstrating peak capacities of approximately 1000 for capillaries having inner diameters between 15 and 150 microm. The on-line coupled SPE columns increased the sample processing capacity by approximately 400-fold for sample solution volume and approximately 10-fold for sample mass. The proteomic applications of this on-line SPE-capillary LC system were evaluated for analysis of both soluble and membrane protein tryptic digests. Using an ion trap tandem MS it was typically feasible to identify 1100-1500 unique peptides in a 5-h analysis. Peptides extracted from the SPE column and then eluted from the LC column covered a hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity range that included an estimated approximately 98% of all tryptic peptides. The SPE-capillary LC implementation also facilitates automation and enables use of both disposable SPE columns and electrospray emitters, providing a robust basis for automated proteomic analyses.  相似文献   

11.
Liu J  Ro KW  Busman M  Knapp DR 《Analytical chemistry》2004,76(13):3599-3606
A new type of electrospray ionization emitter employing a pointed carbon fiber has been developed for interfacing nanoliquid sampling techniques to mass spectrometry. The pointed carbon fiber protruding from an orifice with a surrounding hydrophobic surface confines a small Taylor cone at the tip, which generates a stable electrospray at the tip point. The small Taylor cone improves the electrospray efficiency thereby enhancing the detection limit. This emitter is rugged and able to generate stable electrospray over a wide range of flow rate, ESI voltage, and surface tension variation. Using a solution of angiotensin I, the carbon fiber emitter in 75-microm-i.d. fused-silica tubing was shown to give ion current comparable to that from a commercial 8 microm orifice nanospray emitter. Use of the emitter for ESI-MS/MS analysis of peptides was examined by infusing a mixture of cytochrome c and myoglobin tryptic digest peptides. Protein identification was demonstrated at the level of less than 1 fmol of the peptide consumed. The use of the carbon fiber emitter for interfacing monolithic capillary HPLC to MS was also demonstrated.  相似文献   

12.
Ultrasensitive nanoscale proteomics approaches for characterizing proteins from complex proteomic samples of <50 ng of total mass are described. Protein identifications from 0.5 pg of whole proteome extracts were enabled by ultrahigh sensitivity (<75 zmol for individual proteins) achieved using high-efficiency (peak capacities of approximately 10(3)) 15-microm-i.d. capillary liquid chromatography separations (i.e., using nanoLC, approximately 20 nL/min mobile-phase flow rate at the optimal linear velocity of approximately 0.2 cm/s) coupled on-line with a micro-solid-phase sample extraction and a nanoscale electrospray ionization interface to a 11.4-T Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer (MS). Proteome measurement coverage improved as sample size was increased from as little as 0.5 pg of sample. It was found that a 2.5-ng sample provided 14% coverage of all annotated open reading frames for the microorganism Deinococcus radiodurans, consistent with previous results for a specific culture condition. The estimated detection dynamic range for detected proteins was 10(5)-10(6). An improved accurate mass and LC elution time two-dimensional data analysis methodology, used to both speed and increase the confidence of peptide/protein identifications, enabled identification of 872 proteins/run from a single 3-h nanoLC/FTICR MS analysis. The low-zeptomole-level sensitivity provides a basis for extending proteomics studies to smaller cell populations and potentially to a single mammalian cell. Application with ion trap MS/MS instrumentation allowed protein identification from 50 pg (total mass) of proteomic samples (i.e., approximately 100 times larger than FTICR MS), corresponding to a sensitivity of approximately 7 amol for individual proteins. Compared with single-stage FTICR measurements, ion trap MS/MS provided a much lower proteome measurement coverage and dynamic range for a given analysis time and sample quantity.  相似文献   

13.
Elution-modified displacement chromatography (EMDC) was employed to achieve peptide separations with high efficiency. On-line ESI-MS and ESI-MS/MS measurements showed enrichment and detection of kemptide, a protein kinase A peptide substrate, at low femtomole levels when it was added as a trace marker component to a tryptic digest of bovine serum proteins or to a human growth hormone peptide digest at concentration ratios between 1:10(5) and 1:10(6). In another EMDC separation, five peptides were detected in a mixture containing 20 fmol of human growth hormone tryptic digest mixed with the bovine serum protein digest. We found that EMDC facilitated rapid detection and sequence analysis of trace peptides at levels of approximately 0.5 fmol/microL in complex peptide mixtures with a wide dynamic concentration range. Accordingly, the detection of kemptide by EMDC was found to be 3-4 orders of magnitude more sensitive than that attained in conventional linear elution chromatography separations performed with the same peptide loads. Kemptide was phosphorylated in vitro and was detected along with its neutral loss product in peptide mixtures at low femtomole levels. EMDC enabled both detection and amino acid sequence determination on trace levels of phosphorylated and other posttranslationally modified peptides, suggesting that the technique may be useful for proteomics applications where detection and analysis of trace level peptides are problematic.  相似文献   

14.
Fused-silica capillary LC columns (25-microm i.d.) with 3-microm-i.d. integrated electrospray emitters interfaced to a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer were evaluated for high-sensitivity LC-MS2. Column preparation involved constructing frits by in situ photopolymerization of glycidyl methacrylate and trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate, preparing the electrospray emitter by pulling the column outlet to a fine tip with a CO2 laser puller, and slurry-packing the column with 5-microm reversed-phase particles. Large-volume injections were facilitated by an automated two-pump system that allowed high-flow rates for sample loading and low-flow rates for elution. Small electrospray emitters, low elution flow rates, and optimization of gradient steepness allowed a detection limit of 4 amol, corresponding to 2 pM for 1.8 microL injected on-column, for a mixture of peptides dissolved in artificial cerebral spinal fluid. The system was coupled on-line to microdialysis sampling and was used to monitor and discover endogenous neuropeptides from the globus pallidus of anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats. Time-segmented MS2 scans enabled simultaneous monitoring of Met-enkephalin, Leu-enkephalin, and unknown peptides. Basal dialysate levels of Met-enkephalin and Leu-enkephalin were 60 +/- 30 and 70 +/- 20 pM while K+-stimulated levels were 1,900 +/- 500 and 1,300 +/- 300 pM, respectively (n = 7). Data-dependent and time-segmented MS2 scans revealed several unknown peptides that were present in dialysate. One of the unknowns was identified as peptide I(1-10) (SPQLEDEAKE), a novel product of preproenkephalin A processing, using MS2, MS3, and database searching.  相似文献   

15.
A new multichannel deposition system was developed for off-line liquid chromatography/matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (LC/MALDI-MS). This system employs a pulsed electric field to transfer the eluents from multiple parallel columns directly onto MALDI targets without the column outlets touching the target surface. The deposition device performs well with a wide variety of solvents that have different viscosities, vapor pressures, polarities, and ionic strengths. Surface-modified targets were used to facilitate concentration and precise positioning of samples, allowing for efficient automation of high-throughput MALDI analysis. The operational properties of this system allow the user to prepare samples using MALDI matrixes whose properties range from hydrophilic to hydrophobic. The latter, exemplified by alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid, were typically processed with a multistep deposition method consisting of precoating of individual spots on the target plate, sample deposition, and sample recrystallization steps. Using this method, 50 amol of angiotensin II was detected reproducibly with high signal-to-noise ratio after LC separation. Experimental results show that there is no significant decrease in chromatographic resolution using this device. To assess the behavior of the apparatus for complex mixtures, 5 microg of a tryptic digest of the cytosolic proteins of yeast was analyzed by LC/MALDI-MS and more than 13,500 unique analytes were detected in a single LC/MS analysis.  相似文献   

16.
Capillary electrophoresis/electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (CE/ESI-MS) was applied to the analysis of human red blood cells (RBCs) using the split-flow technique for interfacing CE to MS. By using a long (approximately125-cm) and narrow (approximately 15-microm-i.d.) capillary, the four major proteins of the RBC, which are hemoglobin (Hb, alpha- and beta-chains, 900 amol/chain), carbonic anhydrase I (CAI, approximately 7 amol/cell), and carbonic anhydrase II (CAII, approximately 0.8 amol/cell), were separated from each other and detected at low-attomole levels in one run and minimal sample preparation. Under these conditions, the detection limits for CAI and CAII in lysed RBCs were approximately 20 and approximately 44 amol, respectively. The approximately 20-amol detection limit of CAI was confirmed by the CE/ESI-MS analysis of three intact RBCs that had been drawn into the capillary under a microscope. A shorter capillary (approximately 55 cm long) provided faster analysis time but did not separate CAII from the beta-chain of hemoglobin, causing the CAII signal to be masked by the background chemical noise generated by the approximately 1,000 x molar excess of the beta-chain. Under this condition, the CAII detection limit increased to approximately 500 amol. From three methods of sample introduction (injection of lysed blood, injection of intact cells under microscope, and injection of intact cells suspended in saline solution), injection of lysed blood provided the optimum sensitivity. It was found that a background electrolyte (BGE) containing 0.1% acetic acid in water worked best for the analysis of intact cells, while a BGE containing 0.1% acetic acid in water + acetonitrile (50/50 by volume) worked best for the analysis of lysed blood.  相似文献   

17.
Primary protein sequences were determined for both peptides and enzymatically digested proteins by rapid linked-scan (B/E) liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) at the low-picomole level (10-50 pmol). During the course of a single LC/MS/MS analysis, we demonstrated that it is possible to generate interpretable collision-induced dissociation spectra of the eluting proteolytic peptides. Molecular weights of tryptic peptides were established by using 1/10 of the protein digest by operating in the capillary LC/frit-FABMS mode. Peptides exhibiting the strongest MH+ ions were then selected for subsequent LC/MS/MS analysis (typically 1/5 of the remaining protein digest). Elution times for each chromatographic peak were generally greater than 30 s. It was therefore possible to obtain a minimum of six B/E fast linked-scan spectra during the course of elution of each peptide component. Typically, B/E linked scans of the greatest ion abundance (obtained at the chromatographic peak maximum) were averaged to enhance the signal/noise ratio at these low-picomole levels. Unit resolution was observed for product ions below m/z 1000. Rapid linked scanning by LC/frit-FABMS/MS provided mass assignments for product ions within 0.2-0.3 amu of theoretical values. Side-chain fragment ions (wn and dn) were also observed, which allowed for the differentiation of isobaric amino acids (e.g., leucine and isoleucine). Examples of the application of this fast linked-scan technique to LC/MS/MS are presented for complex mixtures of unknown peptides and the tryptic digestion of phosphorylated beta-casein.  相似文献   

18.
Inlet ionization is a new approach for ionizing both small and large molecules in solids or liquid solvents with high sensitivity. The utility of solvent based inlet ionization mass spectrometry (MS) as a method for analysis of volatile and nonvolatile compounds eluting from a liquid chromatography (LC) column is demonstrated. This new LC/MS approach uses reverse phase solvent systems common to electrospray ionization MS. The first LC/MS analyses using this novel approach produced sharp chromatographic peaks and good quality full mass range mass spectra for over 25 peptides from injection of only 1 pmol of a tryptic digest of bovine serum albumin using an eluent flow rate of 55 μL min(-1). Similarly, full acquisition LC/MS/MS of the MH(+) ion of the drug clozapine, using the same solvent flow rate, produced a signal-to-noise ratio of 54 for the major fragment ion with injection of only 1 μL of a 2 ppb solution. LC/MS results were acquired on two different manufacturer's mass spectrometers using a Waters Corporation NanoAcquity liquid chromatograph.  相似文献   

19.
A mini ball mill (MBM) solvent-free matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry (MS) method allows for the analysis of bacteriorhodopsin (BR), an integral membrane protein that previously presented special analytical problems. For well-defined signals in the molecular ion region of the analytes, a desalting procedure of the MBM sample directly on the MALDI target plate was used to reduce adduction by sodium and other cations that are normally attendant with hydrophobic peptides and proteins as a result of the sample preparation procedure. Mass analysis of the intact hydrophobic protein and the few hydrophobic and hydrophilic tryptic peptides available in the digest is demonstrated with this robust new approach. MS and MS/MS spectra of BR tryptic peptides and intact protein were generally superior to the traditional solvent-based method using the desalted "dry" MALDI preparation procedure. The solvent-free method expands the range of peptides that can be effectively analyzed by MALDI-MS to those that are hydrophobic and solubility-limited.  相似文献   

20.
Silica-based monolithic capillary columns (25 cm x 10 microm i.d.) with integrated nanoESI emitters have been developed to provide high-quality and robust microSPE-nanoLC-ESI-MS analyses. The integrated nanoESI emitter adds no dead volume to the LC separation, allowing stable electrospray operation at flow rates of approximately 10 nL/min. In an initial application with a linear ion trap MS, we identified 5510 unique peptides that covered 1443 distinct Shewanella oneidensis proteins from a 300-ng tryptic digest sample in a single 4-h LC-MS/MS analysis. The use of an integrated monolithic ESI emitter provided enhanced resistance to clogging and provided good run-to-run reproducibility.  相似文献   

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