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1.
The formation of a range of precursor ion charge states from a single concentrated and purified charge state, followed by activation of each charge state, is introduced as a means to obtain more protein structural information than is available from dissociation of a single charge state alone. This approach is illustrated using off-resonance collisional activation of the [M + 8H]8+ to [M + 6H]6+ precursor ions of the bacteriophage MS2 viral coat protein following concentration and purification of the [M + 8H]8+ charge state. This range of charge states was selected on the basis of an ion trap collisional activation study of the effects of precursor ion charge state on the dissociation of the [M + 12H]12+ to [M + 5H]5+ ions. Gas-phase ion/ion proton-transfer reactions and the ion parking technique were applied to purify and concentrate selected precursor ion charge states as well as to simplify the product ion spectra. The high-charge-state ions fragment preferentially at the N-terminal side of proline residues while the product ion spectra of the lowest charge states investigated are dominated by C-terminal aspartic acid cleavages. Maximum structural information is obtained by fragmentation of the intermediate-charge states.  相似文献   

2.
The use of ion/molecule reactions involving multiply protonated ions derived from electrospray for the determination of the charges of product ions formed from collision-induced dissociation is described. The experiments are carried out with a quadrupole ion trap capable of multiple stages of mass spectrometry. The approach is illustrated with proton transfer from a product ion from quadruply protonated melittin, and from a product ion from the (M + 20H)20+ ion from horse myoglobin, to 1,6-diaminohexane. The major product ion from quadruply protonated bovine insulin is used to illustrate the use of a clustering reaction with 1,6-diaminohexane. The ion trap is shown to be a particularly useful tool for employing both collisional activation and low-energy ion/molecule reactions in the same experiment to determine product ion charge.  相似文献   

3.
Currently, proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) allows for quantitative determination of volatile organic compounds in real time at concentrations in the low ppt range, but cannot differentiate isomers or isobaric molecules, using the conventional quadrupole mass filter. Here we pursue the application of linear quadrupole ion trap (LIT) mass spectrometry in combination with proton-transfer reaction chemical ionization to provide the advantages of specificity from MS/MS. A commercial PTR-MS platform composed of a quadrupole mass filter with the addition of end cap electrodes enabled the mass filter to operate as a linear ion trap. The rf drive electronics were adapted to enable the application of dipolar excitation to opposing rods, for collision-induced dissociation (CID) of trapped ions. This adaptation enabled ion isolation, ion activation, and mass analysis. The utility of the PTR-LIT was demonstrated by distinguishing between the isomeric isoprene oxidation pair, methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) and methacrolein (MACR). The CID voltage was adjusted to maximize the m/ z 41 to 43 fragment ratio of MACR while still maintaining adequate sensitivity. Linear calibration curves for MVK and MACR fragments at m/ z 41 and 43 were obtained with limits of detection of approximately 100 ppt, which should enable ambient measurements. Finally, the PTR-LIT method was compared to an established GC/MS method by quantifying MVK and MACR production during a smog chamber isoprene-NO x irradiation experiment.  相似文献   

4.
Cationic peptide electron-transfer products that do not fragment spontaneously are exposed to ion trap collisional activation immediately upon formation while they pass through a high-pressure collision cell (Q2), where the electron-transfer reagent anions are stored. Radial ion acceleration, which is normal to the ion flow, is implemented by applying an auxiliary dipolar alternating current to a pair of opposing rods of the Q2 quadrupole array at a frequency in resonance with the surviving electron-transfer products. Collisional cooling of cations in the pressurized Q2 ensures efficient overlap of the positive and negative ions for ion/ion reactions and also gives rise to relatively long residence times (milliseconds) for ions in Q2, making it possible to fragment ions via radial excitation during their axial transmission. The radial activation for transmission mode electron-transfer ion/ion reactions has been demonstrated with a doubly protonated tryptic peptide, a triply protonated phosphopeptide, and [M + 7H]7+ ions of ubiquitin. In all cases, significant increases in fragment ion yields and structural information from electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) were observed, suggesting the utility of this method for improving transmission mode ETD performance for relatively low charge states of peptides and proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) delivers the unique attributes of electron capture dissociation to mass spectrometers that utilize radio frequency trapping-type devices (e.g., quadrupole ion traps). The method has generated significant interest because of its compatibility with chromatography and its ability to: (1) preserve traditionally labile post-translational modifications (PTMs) and (2) randomly cleave the backbone bonds of highly charged peptide and protein precursor ions. ETD, however, has shown limited applicability to doubly protonated peptide precursors, [M + 2H]2+, the charge and type of peptide most frequently encountered in "bottom-up" proteomics. Here we describe a supplemental collisional activation (CAD) method that targets the nondissociated (intact) electron-transfer (ET) product species ([M + 2H]+*) to improve ETD efficiency for doubly protonated peptides (ETcaD). A systematic study of supplementary activation conditions revealed that low-energy CAD of the ET product population leads to the near-exclusive generation of c- and z-type fragment ions with relatively high efficiency (77 +/- 8%). Compared to those formed directly via ETD, the fragment ions were found to comprise increased relative amounts of the odd-electron c-type ions (c+*) and the even-electron z-type ions (z+). A large-scale analysis of 755 doubly charged tryptic peptides was conducted to compare the method (ETcaD) to ion trap CAD and ETD. ETcaD produced a median sequence coverage of 89%-a significant improvement over ETD (63%) and ion trap CAD (77%).  相似文献   

6.
A commercial quadrupole/time-of-flight (QqTOF) tandem mass spectrometer has been adapted for ion/ion reaction studies. To enable mutual storage of oppositely charged ions in a linear ion trap, the oscillating quadrupole field of the second quadrupole of the system (Q2) serves to store ions in the radial dimension while auxiliary radio frequency is superposed on the end lenses of Q2 during the reaction period to create barriers in the axial dimension. A pulsed dual electrospray (ESI) source is directly coupled to the instrument interface for the purpose of proton transfer reactions. Singly and doubly charged protein ions as high in mass as 66 kDa are readily formed and observed after proton-transfer reactions. For the modified instrument, the mass resolving power is approximately 8000 for a wide m/z range, and the mass accuracy is approximately 20 ppm for external calibration and approximately 5 ppm for internal calibration after ion/ion reactions. Parallel ion parking is demonstrated with a six-component protein mixture, which shows the potential application of reducing spectral complexity and concentrating certain charge states. The current system has high flexibility with respect to defining MS(n) experiments involving collision-induced dissociation (CID) and ion/ion reactions. Protein precursor and CID product masses can be determined with good accuracy, providing an attractive platform for top-down proteomics. Electron transfer dissociation ion/ion reactions are implemented by using a pulsed nano-ESI/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization dual source for ionization. The reaction between protonated peptide ions and radical anions of 1,3-dinitrobenzene formed exclusively c- and z-type fragment ions.  相似文献   

7.
Infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) of N-terminal sulfonated peptides improves de novo sequencing capabilities in a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. Not only does IRMPD promote highly efficient dissociation of the N-terminal sulfonated peptides but also the entire series of y ions down to the y(1) fragment may be detected due to alleviation of the low-mass cutoff problem associated with conventional collisional activated dissociation (CAD) methods in a quadrupole ion trap. Commercial de novo sequencing software was applied for the interpretation of CAD and IRMPD MS/MS spectra collected for seven unmodified peptides and the corresponding N-terminal sulfonated species. In most cases, the additional information obtained by N-terminal sulfonation in combination with IRMPD provided significant improvements in sequence identification. The software sequence tag results were combined with a commercial database searching algorithm to interpret sequence information of a tryptic digest on alpha-casein s1. Energy-variable CAD studies confirmed a 30-40% reduction in the critical energies of the N-terminal sulfonated peptides relative to unmodified peptides. This reduction in dissociation energy facilitates IRMPD in a quadrupole ion trap.  相似文献   

8.
Collisional activation of the intact MS2 viral capsid protein with subsequent ion/ion reactions has been used to identify the presence of this virus in E. coli lysates. Tandem ion trap mass spectrometry experiments on the +7, +8, and +9 charge states, followed by ion/ion reactions, provided the necessary sequence tag information (and molecular weight data) needed for protein identification via database searching. The most directly informative structural information is obtained from those charge states that produce a series of product ions arising from fragmentation at adjacent residues. The formation of these product ions via dissociation at adjacent amino acid residues depends greatly on the charge state of the parent ion. Database searching of the charge-state-specific sequence tags was performed by two different search engines: the ProteinInfo program from the Protein information Retrieval On-line World Wide Web Lab or PROWL and the TagIdent program from the ExPASy molecular biology server. These search engines were used in conjunction with the sequence tag information generated via collisional activation of the intact viral coat protein. These programs were used to evaluate the feasibility of generating sequence tags from collisional activation of intact multiply charged protein ions in a quadrupole ion trap.  相似文献   

9.
One of the major factors governing the "top-down" sequence analysis of intact multiply protonated proteins by tandem mass spectrometry is the effect of the precursor ion charge state on the formation of product ions. To more fully understand this effect, electrospray ionization coupled to a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer, collision-induced dissociation, and gas-phase ion/ion reactions have been employed to examine the fragmentation of the [M + 12H]12+ to [M + H]+ ions of bovine ubiquitin. At low charge states (+1 to +6), loss of NH3 or H2O from the protonated precursor and directed cleavage at aspartic acid residues was observed. At intermediate charge states, (+7, +8, and +9), extensive nonspecific fragmentation of the protein backbone was observed, with 50% sequence coverage obtained from the [M + 8H]8+ ion alone. At high charge states, (+10, +11, +12), the single dominant channel that was observed was the preferential fragmentation of a single proline residue. These data can be readily explained in terms of the current model for intramolecular proton mobilization, that is, the "mobile proton model", the mechanisms for amide bond dissociation developed for protonated peptides, as well as the structures of the multiply charged ions of ubiquitin in the gas phase, examined by ion mobility and hydrogen/deuterium exchange measurements.  相似文献   

10.
Recent advances in phosphopeptide enrichment prior to mass spectrometric analysis show genuine promise for characterization of phosphoproteomes. Tandem mass spectrometry of phosphopeptide ions, using collision-activated dissociation (CAD), often produces product ions dominated by the neutral loss of phosphoric acid. Here we describe a novel method, termed Pseudo MS(n), for phosphopeptide ion dissociation in quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometers. The method induces collisional activation of product ions, those resulting from neutral loss(es) of phosphoric acid, following activation of the precursor ion. Thus, the principal neutral loss product ions are converted into a variety of structurally informative species. Since product ions from both the original precursor activation and all subsequent neutral loss product activations are simultaneously stored, the method generates a "composite" spectrum containing fragments derived from multiple precursors. In comparison to analysis by conventional MS/MS (CAD), Pseudo MS(n) shows improved phosphopeptide ion dissociation for 7 out of 10 synthetic phosphopeptides, as judged by an automated search algorithm (TurboSEQUEST). A similar overall improvement was observed upon application of Pseudo MS(n) to peptides generated by enzymatic digestion of a single phosphoprotein. Finally, when applied to a complex phosphopeptide mixture, several phosphopeptides mis-assigned by TurboSEQUEST under the conventional CAD approach were successfully identified after analysis by Pseudo MS(n).  相似文献   

11.
A liquid chromatography/sonic spray ionization mass spectrometry method (LC/SSI-MS) was developed for qualitative and quantitative analyses of ginkgo terpene trilactones. Five ginkgo terpene trilactones were successfully protonated for qualitative and quantitative analyses under the study conditions. The typical ion adducts were identified as (M + H)+, (M + NH4)+, and (M + Na)+. The limits of detection were achieved between 2.5 and 10 ng with RSD of 0.173-4.82% and a linear range of 10-80 ng with R2 = 0.991-0.999. This method was used to identify and quantify ginkgo terpene trilactones in extractions of ginkgo biloba leaves obtained from three different extraction methods. This is the first completely validated LC/MS method for quantification of ginkgo terpene trilactones. The factors that contributed to reduce the errors of identification and quantification of ginkgo terpene trilactones are systematically reported, and the advantages and disadvantages of LC/MS method in quantitative analysis are also discussed.  相似文献   

12.
We modified a dual-cell linear ion trap mass spectrometer to perform infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) in the low-pressure trap of a dual-cell quadrupole linear ion trap (dual-cell QLT) and perform large-scale IRMPD analyses of complex peptide mixtures. Upon optimization of activation parameters (precursor q-value, irradiation time, and photon flux), IRMPD subtly, but significantly, outperforms resonant-excitation collisional-activated dissociation (CAD) for peptides identified at a 1% false-discovery rate (FDR) from a yeast tryptic digest (95% confidence, p = 0.019). We further demonstrate that IRMPD is compatible with the analysis of isobaric-tagged peptides. Using fixed QLT rf amplitude allows for the consistent retention of reporter ions, but necessitates the use of variable IRMPD irradiation times, dependent upon precursor mass to charge (m/z). We show that IRMPD activation parameters can be tuned to allow for effective peptide identification and quantitation simultaneously. We thus conclude that IRMPD performed in a dual-cell ion trap is an effective option for the large-scale analysis of both unmodified and isobaric-tagged peptides.  相似文献   

13.
This paper describes a film bulk acoustic resonator (FBAR) mass sensor for detecting Hg2+ ion in water with excellent sensitivity and selectivity. When a thin Au film was deposited on the surface of an FBAR, the resonant frequency shifted to a lower value when the film was exposed to Hg2+ in aqueous solution. The FBAR sensor detected as low as 10(-9) M Hg2+ (0.2 ppb Hg2+) in water. Other ions such as K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+ had little or no effect on the resonant frequency of the FBAR. Coating of the FBAR Au surface with a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of 4-mercaptobenzoic acid decreased the Hg2+ response.  相似文献   

14.
An ion trap/ion mobility/quadrupole/time-of-flight mass spectrometer has been developed for the analysis of peptide mixtures. In this approach, a mixture of peptides is electrosprayed into the gas phase. The mixture of ions that is created is accumulated in an ion trap and periodically injected into a drift tube where ions separate according to differences in gas-phase ion mobilities. Upon exiting the drift tube, ions enter a quadrupole mass filter where a specific mass-to-charge (m/z) ratio can be selected prior to collisional activation in an octopole collision cell. Parent and fragment ions that exit the collision cell are analyzed using a reflectron geometry time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The overall configuration allows different species to be selected according to their mobilities and m/z ratios prior to collision-induced dissociation and final MS analysis. A key parameter in these studies is the pressure of the target gas in the collision cell. Above a critical pressure, the well-defined mobility separation degrades. The approach is demonstrated by examining a mixture of tryptic digest peptides of ubiquitin.  相似文献   

15.
Payne AH  Glish GL 《Analytical chemistry》2001,73(15):3542-3548
Thermally assisted infrared multiphoton photodissociation (TA-IRMPD) provides an effective means to dissociate ions in the quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer (QITMS) without detrimentally affecting the performance of the instrument. IRMPD can offer advantages over collision-induced dissociation (CID). However, collisions with the QITMS bath gas at the standard pressure and ambient temperature cause IR-irradiated ions to lose energy faster than photons can be absorbed to induce dissociation. The low pressure required for IRMPD (< or = 10(-5) Torr) is not that required for optimal performance of the QITMS (10(-3) Torr), and sensitivity and resolution suffer. TA-IRMPD is performed with the bath gas at an elevated temperature. The higher temperature of the bath gas results in less energy lost in collisions of the IR-excited ions with the bath gas. Thermal assistance allows IRMPD to be used at or near optimal pressures, which results in an approximately 1 order of magnitude increase in signal intensity. Unlike CID, IRMPD allows small product ions, those less than about one-third the m/z of the parent ion, to be observed. IRMPD should also be more easily paired with fluctuating ion sources, as the corresponding fluctuations in resonant frequencies do not affect IRMPD. Finally, while IR irradiation nonselectively causes dissociation of all ions, TA-IRMPD can be made selective by using axial expansion to move ions away from the path of the laser beam.  相似文献   

16.
A novel and practical technique for performing both parent and neutral loss (P&NL) monitoring experiments on a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer is presented. This technique is capable of performing scans analogous to the parent and neutral loss scans routinely applied on tandem-in-space instruments and allows for the screening of a sample to detect analytes of a specific compound class on a chromatographic time-scale. Acylcarnitines were chosen as the model compound class to demonstrate the analytical utility of P&NL monitoring because of their amenability to electrospray ionization (ESI), their unique and informative MS/MS fragmentation pattern, and their importance in biological functions. The [M + H]+ ions of all acylcarnitines dissociate to produce neutral losses of 59 and 161 amu and common product ions at m/z 60, 85, and 144. Both the neutral loss monitoring of 59 amu and the parent ion monitoring of m/z 85 are shown to be capable of identifying acylcarnitine [M + H]+ ions in a synthetic mixture and spiked pig plasma. The neutral loss monitoring of 59 amu is successful in detecting acylcarnitines in an unspiked pig plasma sample.  相似文献   

17.
Methods for bidirectional ion transmission between distinct quadrupole arrays were developed on a quadrupole/time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometer (QqTOF) containing three quadrupoles (ion guide Q0, mass filter Q1, and collision cell Q2) and a reflectron TOF analyzer, for the purpose of implementing multistage ion/ion reaction experiments. The transfer efficiency, defined as the percentage of ions detected after two transfer steps relative to the initial ion abundance, was found to be about 60% between Q2 and Q0 (with passage through the intermediate array (Q1)) and almost 100% between Q2 and Q1. Efficient ion transfer enabled new means for executing MSn experiments on an instrument of this type by operating Q1 in rf/dc mode for performing multiple steps of precursor/product ion isolation while passing ions through Q1 or trapping ions in Q1. In the latter case, the Q1 functioned as a linear ion trap. Either collision induced dissociation (CID) or ion/ion reactions can be conducted in between each stage of mass analysis. MS3 or MS4 experiments were developed to illustrate the charge increase of peptide ions via two steps of charge inversion ion/ion reactions, CID of electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) products and CID of a metal-peptide complex formed from ion/ion reactions.  相似文献   

18.
Thermally assisted collision-induced dissociation (TA-CID) provides increased dissociation in comparison with CID performed at ambient temperature in a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. Heating the bath/collision gas during CID increases the initial internal energy of the ions and reduces the collisional cooling rate. Thus, using the same CID parameters, the parent ion can be activated to higher levels of internal energy, increasing the efficiency of dissociation and the number of dissociation pathways. The increase in the number of dissociation pathways can provide additional structural information. A consequence of the increase in initial internal energy is the ability to use less power to effect collisional activation. This allows lower q(z) values to be used and, thus, a greater mass range of product ions to be observed. TA-CID alleviates the problems associated with traditional CID and results in more available information than traditional CID.  相似文献   

19.
Observed peptide gas-phase fragmentation patterns are a complex function of many variables. To systematically probe this phenomenon, an array of 40 peptides was synthesized for study. The array of sequences was designed to hold certain variables (peptide length) constant and randomize or balance others (peptide amino acid distribution and position). A high-quality tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) data set was acquired for each peptide for all observed charge states on multiple MS instruments, quadrupole-time-of-flight and quadrupole ion trap. The data were analyzed as a function of total charge state and number of mobile protons. Previously known dissociation trends were observed, validating our approach. In addition, the general influence of basic amino acids on dissociation could be determined because, in contrast to the more widely studied tryptic peptides, the amino acids H, K, and R were positionally distributed. Interestingly, our results suggest that cleavage at all basic amino acids is suppressed when a mobile proton is available. Cleavage at H becomes favored only under conditions where a partially mobile proton is present, a caveat to the previously reported trend of enhanced cleavage at H. Finally, all acquired data were used as a benchmark to determine how well these sequences would have been identified in a database search using a common algorithm, Mascot.  相似文献   

20.
Mass spectra produced by nozzle-skimmer dissociation (NSD) have been little used in the past for structural characterization. NSD cannot be used on mass-separated ions (MS/MS), and for electrosprayed protein ions, previous NSD spectra showed backbone cleavages similar to those from energetic methods such as collisionally activated dissociation (CAD) or infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD). However, our experimental configuration with Fourier transform (FT) MS makes possible three consecutive steps of NSD ion activation: thermal in the entrance capillary and collisional in both the nozzle-skimmer (N-S) region and the region after the skimmer before the quadrupole entrance lens (S-Q). In the high-pressure N-S region of adjustable path length, ions undergo high-frequency, low-energy collisions to rupture weak noncovalent or covalent bonds, with these "denatured" products then subjected to high-energy collisions in the low-pressure S-Q region to cleave strong backbone bonds. These NSD spectra, plus those from variable capillary thermal activation, of 8+ to 11+ ubiquitin ions electrosprayed from denatured solution show backbone cleavages between 74 of 75 amino acid pairs, vs 66 for CAD and 50 for IRMPD in the FTMS cell. Thermal activation by the inlet capillary of the newly desolvated 6+, 7+ ubiquitin ions from electrospraying the native conformer increases the NSD yield from 8% at 56 degrees C to 96% at 76 degrees C, but with little change in product branching ratios; this capillary heating has no effect on CAD or IRMPD of these ions collected in the FTMS cell. Ion desolvation with its concomitant H-bond strengthening appears to produce a transiently stable conformer whose formation can be prevented by capillary heating. The far more complex and stable noncovalent tertiary structures of large protein ions in the gas phase have made MS/MS difficult; initial inhibition of tertiary structure formation with immediate NSD ("prefolding dissociation") appears promising for the top down characterization of a 200-kDa protein.  相似文献   

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