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1.
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been combined with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI MS) and radionuclide detection to assay mass-limited biological samples. Nanovial sampling techniques enable injections into the CE capillary from 50 to 150-nL volume samples; after the separation, nanoliter fraction collection combines the CE effluent with a MALDI matrix and minimizes sample spreading, thus allowing both MALDI MS and radionuclide detection on the CE fractions. MALDI MS complements the elution time information of CE by providing accurate molecular mass data, and radionuclide detection provides zeptomole limits of detection with quantitative information. While MALDI MS detects all fully processed peptides at sufficient concentration, culturing the neuron in media containing 35S-Met provides selective radionuclide detection of newly synthesized methionine-containing peptides. The analysis and detection of the expected neuropeptides and hormones in a single 40-microm bag cell neuron from Aplysia californica with CE/MALDI MS/radionuclide detection demonstrates the ability of this hyphenated approach to work with chemically complex mass-limited samples.  相似文献   

2.
MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is a promising technique in the field of molecular (immuno)histology but is confronted with the problematic large-scale identification of peptides from thin tissue sections. In this study we present a workflow that significantly increased the number of identified peptides in a given MALDI-MSI data set and we evaluated its power concerning relative peptide quantifications. Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) profiling on matrix-coated thin tissue sections allowed us to align spectra of different MS sources, matching identical peaks in the process, thus linking MSI data to tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) on one hand and semiquantitative liquid chromatography (LC)/MS data on the other. Bonanza clustering was applied in order to group MS/MS spectra of structurally related peptides, making it possible to infer the identity of MSI-detected compounds based on identified members within the same cluster, effectively increasing the number of identifications in a single MSI data set. Out of 136 detected peptides with MALDI-MSI, we were able to identify 46 peptides. For 31 of these, a LC/quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) counterpart was detected, and we observed similar obese (ob/ob) to wild-type (wt) peak intensity ratios for 18 peptides. This workflow significantly increased the number of identifications of peptide masses detected with MALDI-MSI and evaluated the power of this imaging method for relative quantification of peptide levels between experimental conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Protein ubiquitination plays an important role in the degradation and other functional regulation of cellular proteins in organisms ranging from yeasts to mammals. Trypsin digestion of ubiquitin conjugated proteins produces diglycine branched peptides in which the C-terminal Gly-Gly fragment of ubiquitin is attached to the epsilon-amino group of a modified lysine residue within the peptide. This provides a platform for mapping ubiquitination sites using mass spectrometry. Here we report the development of a novel strategy for determining posttraslational protein ubiquitination based on the N-terminal sulfonation of diglycine branched peptides. In contrast to conventional tandem MS spectra of native tryptic peptides, MALDI MS/MS analysis of a sulfonated tryptic peptide containing a diglycine branch generates a unique spectrum composed of a signature portion and a sequence portion. The signature portion of the spectrum consists of several intense ions resulting from the elimination of the tags, the N-terminal residues at the peptide and the branch, and their combination. This unique ion distribution pattern can distinguish ubiquitination modificatons from others and can identify the first N-terminal residues of the peptides as well. The sequence portion consists of an exclusive series of y-type ions and y' ions (differing by the loss of one glycine residue from the sulfonated diglycine branch) that can directly reveal the amino acid sequence of the peptide and the precise location of the ubiquitination site. The technique is demonstrated for a series of synthetic peptides and is validated by a model protein, tetraubiquitin. Our results show that the MALDI MS/MS analysis of sulfonated tryptic peptides can provide a highly effective method for the determination of ubiquitination substrates, ubiquitination sites on protein targets, and modification sites on ubiquitins themselves.  相似文献   

4.
Sialylated glycopeptides contained in liquid chromatographic fractions of bovine alpha1-glycoprotein tryptic digests were isolated from asialo peptides using capillary electrophoresis (CE). CE effluents were deposited directly onto a metallic target and analyzed using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. This method allowed the characterization of four N-glycosylation sites in the glycoprotein, and each site was observed as a set of sialylated peptide glycoforms. Tandem mass spectrometry was used to confirm peptide sequences and glycan content in glycoforms. The CE method developed for this study resulted in a very clear separation of the sialylated from the asialo content of glycoprotein digests and proved very useful in the determination of the nature and location of sialylated glycans along the protein chain. This article is the first report describing the use of on-target CE fraction collection using a MALDI removable sample concentrator.  相似文献   

5.
Wang J  Ma M  Chen R  Li L 《Analytical chemistry》2008,80(16):6168-6177
An off-line interface incorporating sheathless flow and counter-flow balance is developed to couple capillary electrophoresis (CE) to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization Fourier transform mass spectrometry (MALDI FTMS) for neuropeptide analysis of complex tissue samples. The new interface provides excellent performance due to the integration of three aspects: (1) A porous polymer joint constructed near the capillary outlet for the electrical circuit completion has simplified the CE interface by eliminating a coaxial sheath liquid and enables independent optimization of separation and deposition. (2) The electroosmotic flow at reversed polarity (negative) mode CE is balanced and reversed by a pressure-initiated capillary siphoning (PICS) phenomenon, which offers improved CE resolution and simultaneously generates a low flow (<100 nL/min) for fraction collection. (3) The predeposited nanoliter volume 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) spots on a Parafilm-coated MALDI sample plate offers an improved substrate for effective effluent enrichment. Compared with direct MALDI MS analysis, CE separation followed by MALDI MS detection consumes nearly 10-fold less sample (50 nL) while exhibiting 5-10-fold enhancement in S/N ratio that yields the limit of detection down to 1.5 nM, or 75 attomoles. This improvement in sensitivity allows 230 peaks detected in crude extracts from only a few pooled neuronal tissues and increases the number of identified peptides from 19 to 43 (Cancer borealis pericardial organs (n = 4)) in a single analysis. In addition, via the characteristic migration behaviors in CE, some specific structural and chemical information of the neuropeptides such as post-translational modifications and family variations has been visualized, making the off-line CE-MALDI MS a promising strategy for enhanced neuropeptidomic profiling.  相似文献   

6.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry (MS) is a central tool for proteomic analysis, yet the singly protonated tryptic peptide ions produced by MALDI are significantly more difficult to dissociate for tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) than the corresponding multiply protonated ions. In order to overcome this limitation, current proteomic approaches using MALDI-MS/MS involve high-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID). Unfortunately, the use of high-energy CID complicates product ion spectra with a significant proportion of irrelevant fragments while also reducing mass accuracy and mass resolution. In order to address the lack of a high-resolution, high mass accuracy MALDI-MS/MS platform for proteomics, Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS) and a recently developed MS/MS technique termed CIRCA (for combination of infrared and collisional activation) have been applied to proteomic analysis. Here, CIRCA is shown to be suitable for dissociating singly protonated tryptic peptides, providing greater sequence coverage than either CID or infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) alone. Furthermore, the CIRCA fragmentation spectra are of sufficient quality to allow protein identification based on the MS/MS spectra alone or in concert with the peptide mass fingerprint (PMF). This is accomplished without compromising mass accuracy or mass resolution. As a result, CIRCA serves to enable MALDI-FTICR-MS/MS for high-performance proteomics experiments.  相似文献   

7.
Today, two-dimensional mass spectrometry analysis of biological tissues by means of a technique called mass imaging, mass spectrometry imaging (MSI), or imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) has found application in investigating the distribution of moleculesMSI with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and secondary ion MS (SIMS). However, the size of the matrix crystal and the migration of analytes can decrease the spatial resolution in MALDI, and SIMS can only ionize compounds with relatively low molecular weights. To overcome these problems, we developed a nanoparticle-assisted laser desorption/ionization (nano-PALDI)-based MSI. We used nano-PALDI MSI to visualize lipids and peptides at a resolution of 15 microm in mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

8.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (tandem) mass spectrometry (MALDI MS) is widely used in protein chemistry and proteomics research for the identification and characterization of proteins isolated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In an effort to minimize sample handling and increase sample throughput, we have developed a novel in-gel digestion protocol where sample preparation is performed directly on a MALDI probe with prestructured sample support. The protocol consists of few sample-handling steps and has minimal consumption of reagents, making the protocol sensitive, timesaving, and cost-efficient. Performance of the on-probe sample preparation protocol was demonstrated by analysis of a set of rat liver proteins obtained from a fluorescently stained (Cy3 and SyproRuby) two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel. The success rate of protein identification by on-probe tryptic digestion and MALDI peptide mass mapping was 89%. The on-probe in-gel digestion procedure provided superior sensitivity and peptide mass mapping performance as compared to our standard in-gel digestion protocol. The on-probe digestion technique resulted in significantly improved amino acid sequence coverage of proteins, mainly due to efficient recovery and detection of large (>1.5 kDa) hydrophobic peptides. These observations indicate that numerous tryptic peptides are lost when using the standard in-gel digestion methods and sample preparation techniques for MALDI MS. This study also demonstrates that the on-probe digestion protocol combined with MALDI tandem mass spectrometry provides a robust platform for proteomics research, including protein identification and determination of posttranslational modifications.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Stable-isotope dimethyl labeling for quantitative proteomics   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Hsu JL  Huang SY  Chow NH  Chen SH 《Analytical chemistry》2003,75(24):6843-6852
In this paper, we report a novel, stable-isotope labeling strategy for quantitative proteomics that uses a simple reagent, formaldehyde, to globally label the N-terminus and epsilon-amino group of Lys through reductive amination. This labeling strategy produces peaks differing by 28 mass units for each derivatized site relative to its nonderivatized counterpart and 4 mass units for each derivatized isotopic pair. This labeling reaction is fast (less than 5 min) and complete without any detectable byproducts based on the analysis of MALDI and LC/ESI-MS/MS spectra of both derivatized and nonderivatized peptide standards and tryptic peptides of hemoglobin molecules. The intensity of the a(1) and y(n-1) ions produced, which were not detectable from most of the nonderivatized fragments, was substantially enhanced upon labeling. We further tested the method based on the analysis of an isotopic pair of peptide standards and a pair of defined protein mixtures with known H/D ratios. Using LC/MS for quantification and LC/MS/MS for peptide sequencing, the results show a negligible isotopic effect, a good mass resolution between the isotopic pair, and a good correlation between the experimental and theoretical data (errors 0-4%). The relative standard deviation of H/D values calculated from peptides deduced from the same protein are less than 13%. The applicability of the method for quantitative protein profiling was also explored by analyzing changes in nuclear protein abundance in an immortalized E7 cell with and without arsenic treatment.  相似文献   

11.
MALDI MS imaging and single-cell profiling are important new capabilities for mass spectrometry. The distribution of neuropeptides within a cell plays an important role in the functioning of the cells in a neuronal network. Protocols for subcellular MALDI MS are described that allow comparative peptide profiling of cell bodies and the neuronal processes (neurites) using single isolated neurons from the neuronal model Aplysia californica. The seawater surrounding the neurons is problematic for mass spectrometry and so must be removed in a manner that does not cause morphological changes or a redistribution of the neuropeptides. Several protocols have been investigated for subcellular spatial profiling, including the use of air-drying, replacement of the seawater with deionized water, and substitution of the cell matrix with fluorinert, mineral oil and glycerol, as well as paraformaldehyde fixation. Glycerol stabilization offers the best combination of preservation of cell morphology and prevention of neuropeptide redistribution. The profiles of the peptides in specific neuronal processes and the cell bodies demonstrate a variety of differences that appear to be cell-specific. These methods are suitable for smaller cells and subcellular MS imaging.  相似文献   

12.
With the advent of soft ionization methods such as MALDI and ESI, mass spectrometry has become the most important technique for the analysis of proteins and peptides. ESI-MS is often preceded by separation of the peptide sample by reversed-phase liquid chromatography (LC). Acetonitrile (ACN) is the most commonly employed organic solvent in LC-ESI-MS analysis of peptides. In this report, we demonstrate that the use of methanol (MeOH) as the organic modifier improves the detection limits for analysis of peptide mixtures such as those found in tryptic digests of proteins. A nanoLC-ESI-quadrupole ion trap instrument (LCQ Deca, ThermoFinnigan) was used to analyze peptide standards, protein digests of known concentrations, and tryptic digests of 2-DGE-separated proteins. MeOH displayed excellent chromatographic performance (separation and sensitivity), and shorter gradient times were possible for chromatographic separation with MeOH versus ACN. Sensitivity levels of a few hundred attomoles were achieved with MeOH; those levels could not be achieved with ACN. In addition, MeOH-based nanoLC-MS/MS yielded superior results for the analysis of digests of 2-DGE-separated proteins. For the 14 protein spots analyzed, the success rate of protein identification with MeOH-based nanoLC-ESI-MS/MS was 100%, with multiple proteins identified in several of the spots. In contrast, ACN-based procedure failed to identify any proteins in 21% of the spots and overall identified 33% fewer proteins than the MeOH-based procedure. In summary, higher sensitivity and shorter gradient times make MeOH an excellent organic modifier for the use in nanoLC-ESI-MS/MS analysis of peptides.  相似文献   

13.
MALDI imaging allows the creation of a "molecular image" of a tissue slice. This image is reconstructed from the ion abundances in spectra obtained while rastering the laser over the tissue. These images can then be correlated with tissue histology to detect potential biomarkers of, for example, aberrant cell types. MALDI, however, is known to have problems with ion suppression, making it difficult to correlate measured ion abundance with concentration. It would be advantageous to have a method which could provide more accurate protein concentration measurements, particularly for screening applications or for precise comparisons between samples. In this paper, we report the development of a novel MALDI imaging method for the localization and accurate quantitation of proteins in tissues. This method involves optimization of in situ tryptic digestion, followed by reproducible and uniform deposition of an isotopically labeled standard peptide from a target protein onto the tissue, using an aerosol-generating device. Data is acquired by MALDI multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mass spectrometry (MS), and accurate peptide quantitation is determined from the ratio of MRM transitions for the endogenous unlabeled proteolytic peptides to the corresponding transitions from the applied isotopically labeled standard peptides. In a parallel experiment, the quantity of the labeled peptide applied to the tissue was determined using a standard curve generated from MALDI time-of-flight (TOF) MS data. This external calibration curve was then used to determine the quantity of endogenous peptide in a given area. All standard curves generate by this method had coefficients of determination greater than 0.97. These proof-of-concept experiments using MALDI MRM-based imaging show the feasibility for the precise and accurate quantitation of tissue protein concentrations over 2 orders of magnitude, while maintaining the spatial localization information for the proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The coupling of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) to Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS) provides an exceptionally capable platform for peptide analysis, but an important limitation of this approach is the difficulty in obtaining informative tandem mass spectra (MS/MS) of singly protonated peptides. This difficulty is especially pronounced with peptide ions containing basic amino acid residues (for example, tryptic peptides). While such ions can be fragmented in some instrument configurations, most FTICR instruments have comparatively little facility for high-energy fragmentation. Here, a novel MS/MS approach implemented with MALDI-FTICR-MS and specifically intended for enhanced fragmentation of singly protonated peptides is described. The method involves infrared irradiation in concert with the simultaneous application of sustained off-resonance irradiation collision-induced dissociation (SORI-CID). This form of MS/MS, described as a combination of infrared and collisional activation (CIRCA), is shown to provide a greater capacity for dissociation of singly charged model peptide ions as compared to infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) or SORI-CID alone. Overall, the CIRCA approach is demonstrated to be a feasible technique for accessing useful fragmentation pathways of singly charged peptides, including those harboring basic amino acid residues--a crucial feature in the context of proteomics.  相似文献   

15.
In this work, the utilization of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometric imaging (MALDI-MSI) for capillary electrophoresis (CE) analysis of peptides based on a simple and robust off-line interface has been investigated. The interface involves sliding the CE capillary distal end within a machined groove on a MALDI sample plate, which is precoated with a thin layer of matrix for continuous sample deposition. MALDI-MSI by time of flight (TOF)/TOF along the CE track enables high-resolution and high-sensitivity detection of peptides, allowing the reconstruction of a CE electropherogram while providing accurate mass measurements and structural identification of molecules. Neuropeptide standards and their H/D isotopic formaldehyde-labeled derivatives were analyzed using this new platform. Normalized intensity ratios of individual ions extracted from the CE trace were compared to MALDI-MS direct analysis and the theoretical ratios. The CE-MALDI-MSI results show potential for sensitive and quantitative analysis of peptide mixtures spanning a wide dynamic range.  相似文献   

16.
Nayak R  Liu J  Sen AK  Knapp DR 《Analytical chemistry》2008,80(22):8840-8844
A gold coated nanoporous alumina surface was used for dual ionization mode mass spectrometric analysis using desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) and laser desorption ionization (LDI). DESI and LDI mass spectrometry (MS) from the nanoporous alumina surface were compared with conventional electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) for analysis of tryptic digests of proteins. Combined use of DESI and LDI offer greater peptide coverage than either method alone and comparable peptide coverage as with dual MALDI and ESI. This dual ionization technique using a common platform with same sample spot demonstrates a potential time and cost-effective tool for improved shotgun proteomic analysis.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed an off-line coupling of capillary electrophoresis (CE) to matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry(MALDI-TOF-MS) based on CE fraction collection onto prestructured MALDI sample supports. Analyte carryover and detection sensitivity were investigated using a standard peptide mixture. Low femtomole amounts were detected, and no noticeable carryover was discovered. The performance of the method was evaluated with a mixture of tryptic digests of proteins from a human fetal brain cDNA expression library. The total number of identified peptides was increased from 47 to 211 when the CE-MALDI interface was used compared to direct MALDI-MS analysis. Sequence coverage with CE-MALDI was in the 25-60% range for the different proteins, corresponding to an increase of 1.3-4.9 times relative to that obtained with MALDI-MS of the crude mixture. Fractionation of sample components also facilitated protein identification by MALDI postsource decay analysis. Our initial results suggest this CE-MALDI interface can be used for the analysis of complex peptide mixtures isolated from biological tissues.  相似文献   

18.
The goal of characterization of the proteome, while challenging in itself, is further complicated by the microheterogeneity introduced by posttranslational modifications such as glycosylation. A combination of liquid chromatography (LC), capillary electrophoresis (CE), and mass spectrometry (MS) offers the advantages of unique selectivity and high efficiency of the separation methods combined with the mass specificity and sensitivity of MS. In the current work, the combination of liquid-phase separations and mass spectrometry is demonstrated through the on-line coupling of electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) and off-line coupling with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI TOF-MS). LC/ESI-MS yields real-time results while maintaining the separation obtained from the LC analysis. CE/MALDI TOF-MS offers high-mass detection and extremely low detection limits. The unique separation selectivity of CE relative to reversed-phase HPLC separations of the members of a glycopeptide family was used to develop an integrated multidimensional analysis achieved by the off-line coupling of LC, CE, and MALDI TOF-MS. To demonstrate the applicability of these techniques to the characterization of the heterogeneity of posttranslational modifications present in glycoproteins, we will report on the study of the glycoforms present in a N-linked site in a single-chain plasminogen activator (DSPAα1).  相似文献   

19.
A novel liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) procedure was investigated for preparation of peptide and protein samples for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI MS). LLE using ethyl acetate as the water-immiscible organic solvent enabled segregation of hydrophobic and hydrophilic polypeptides in mixtures, thereby reducing the complexity of mass spectra obtained by MALDI MS. The LLE technique was optimized for rapid and sensitive in situ (on-target) sample preparation for MALDI MS analysis of proteins and peptides at low-picomole and subpicomole levels. Addition of MALDI matrix to the organic solvent enhanced the efficiency of the LLE-MALDI MS method for analysis of hydrophobic peptides and proteins. LLE-MALDI MS enabled the detection of the hydrophobic membrane protein bacteriorhodopsin as a component in a simple protein mixture. Peptide mixtures containing phosphorylated, glycosylated, or acylated peptides were successfully separated and analyzed by the in situ LLE-MALDI MS technique and demonstrate the potential of this method for enhanced separation and structural analysis of posttranslationally modified peptides in proteomics research.  相似文献   

20.
Although alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid functions as an excellent matrix for the analysis of most peptides using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI TOF) mass spectrometry, the ionization of phosphorylated peptides is usually suppressed by nonphosphorylated peptides. As an alternative matrix, 2',4',6'-trihydroxyacetophenone (THAP) with diammonium citrate was found to overcome this problem for the MALDI TOF mass spectrometric analysis of proteolytic digests of phosphorylated proteins. Specifically, the abundances of phosphorylated peptides in tryptic digests of bovine beta-casein and protein kinase C (PKC)-treated mouse cardiac troponin I were enhanced more than 10-fold using THAP during positive ion MALDI TOF mass spectrometry. The protonated molecules of phosphorylated peptides were sufficiently abundant that postsource decay TOF mass spectrometry was used to confirm the number of phosphate groups in each peptide. Finally, tryptic digestion followed by analysis using MALDI TOF mass spectrometry with THAP as the matrix facilitated the identification of a unique phosphorylation site in PKC-treated troponin I.  相似文献   

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