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1.
High-throughput microfluidic processing of protein digests integrated with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry on a compact disk (CD) is described. Centrifugal force moves liquid through multiple microstructures, each containing a 10-nL reversed-phase chromatography column. The CD enables parallel preparation of 96 samples with volumes ranging from one to several microliters. The peptides in the digests are concentrated, desalted, and subsequently eluted from the columns directly into MALDI target areas (200 x 400 microm) on the CD using a solvent containing the MALDI matrix. After crystallization, the CD is inserted into the MALDI instrument for peptide mass fingerprinting and database identification at a routine sensitivity down to the 200-amol level. Detection of proteolytic peptides down to the 50-amol level is demonstrated. The success rate of the CD technology in protein identification is about twice that of the C(18) ZipTips and standard MALDI steel targets. The CDs are operated using robotics to transfer samples and reagents from microcontainers to the processing inlets on the disposable CD and spinning to control the movement of liquid through the microstructures.  相似文献   

2.
We report substantial in situ enrichment of phosphopeptides in peptide mixtures using zirconium oxide coated plates for detection by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The novel feature of this approach rests on the specific preparation of zirconium oxide coatings using reactive landing on stainless steel support of gas-phase positive ions produced by electrospray of zirconium(IV)-n-propoxide solutions in 1-propanol. Reactive landing was found to produce durable functionalized surfaces for selective phosphopeptide capture and desorption-ionization by MALDI. Enrichment factors on the order of 20-90 were achieved for several monophosphorylated peptides relative to abundant nonphosphorylated peptides in tryptic digests. We demonstrate the ability of the zirconium oxide functionalized MALDI surfaces to facilitate detection of enriched phosphopeptides in mid-femtomole amounts of alpha-casein digests per MALDI spot.  相似文献   

3.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization plates coated with poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PHEMA) brushes that are derivatized with Fe(III)-nitrilotriacetate (NTA) complexes allow selective, efficient phosphopeptide enrichment prior to analysis by mass spectrometry (MS). Fe(III)-NTA-PHEMA brushes (60 nm thick) have a phosphopeptide binding capacity of 0.6 microg/cm(2) and exhibit phosphopeptide recoveries of over 70%, whereas much thinner polymer films containing Fe(III)-NTA afford a recovery of only 20%, and a monolayer of Fe(III)-NTA shows a recovery of just 10%. Recoveries are determined by comparing signals from enriched unlabeled phosphopeptides with those of their deuterium-labeled analogues that were added to the plate just prior to addition of matrix. Mass spectra of phosphopeptide-containing samples enriched using Fe(III)-NTA-PHEMA-modified plates also demonstrate higher recoveries or fewer interfering peaks than corresponding spectra obtained with enrichment using several commercially available Fe(III)-containing films and resins or metal oxide materials. When analyzing tryptic digests of beta-casein, the Fe(III)-NTA-PHEMA brushes allow detection of as little as 15 fmol of phosphopeptide. Moreover, with both ovalbumin and beta-casein digests, phosphopeptide signals dominate the mass spectra obtained using these modified plates.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
We describe a rapid and efficient method for the identification of phosphopeptides, which we term mass spectrometric (MS) phosphopeptide fingerprinting. The method involves quantitative comparison of proteolytic peptides from native versus completely dephosphorylated proteins. Dephosphorylation of serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues is achieved by in-gel treatment of the separated proteins with hydrogen fluoride (HF). This chemical dephosphorylation results in enrichment of those unmodified peptides that correspond to previously phosphorylated peptides. Quantitative comparison of the signal-to-noise ratios of peaks in the treated versus untreated samples are used to identify phosphopeptides, which can be confirmed and further studied by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). We have applied this method to identify eight known phosphorylation sites of Xenopus Aurora A kinase, as well as several novel sites in the Xenopus chromosome passenger complex (CPC).  相似文献   

6.
Due to the dynamic nature and low stoichiometry of protein phosphorylation, enrichment of phosphorylated peptides from proteolytic mixtures is often necessary prior to their characterization by mass spectrometry. Several phosphopeptide isolation strategies have been presented in the literature, including immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography. However, that technique suffers from poor selectivity and reproducibility. Recently, titanium dioxide-based columns have been successfully employed for phosphopeptide enrichment by several research groups. Here, we present, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of the utility of zirconium dioxide microtips for phosphopeptide isolation prior to mass spectrometric analysis. These microtips display similar overall performance as TiO2 microtips. However, more selective isolation of singly phosphorylated peptides was observed with ZrO2 compared to TiO2 whereas TiO2 preferentially enriched multiply phosphorylated peptides. Thus, these two chromatographic materials possess complementary properties. For alpha- and beta-casein, Glu-C digestion provided no evident advantage compared to trypsin digestion when combined with TiO2 or ZrO2 phosphopeptide enrichment.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Protein phosphorylation is one of the most important known posttranslational modifications. Tandem mass spectrometry has become an important tool for mapping out the phosphorylation sites. However, when a peptide generated from the enzymatic or chemical digestion of a phosphoprotein is highly phosphorylated or contains many potential phosphorylation residues, phosphorylation site assignment becomes difficult. Separation and enrichment of phosphopeptides from a digest mixture is desirable and often a critical step for MS/MS-based site determination. In this work, we present a novel open tubular immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (OT-IMAC) method, which is found to be more effective and reproducible for phosphopeptide enrichment, compared to a commonly used commercial product, Ziptip from Millipore. A strategy based on a combination of OT-IMAC, sequential dual-enzyme digestion, and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) quadrupole time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometry for phosphoprotein characterization is presented. It is shown that MALDI MS/MS with collision-induced dissociation can be very effective in generating fragment ion spectra containing rich structural information, which enables the identification of phosphorylation sites even from highly phosphorylated peptides. The applicability of this method for real world applications is demonstrated in the characterization and identification of phosphorylation sites of a Na(+)/H(+) exchanger fusion protein, His182, which was phosphorylated in vitro using the kinase Erk2.  相似文献   

9.
Determination of site-specific changes in the levels of protein phosphorylation in mammals presents a formidable analytical challenge. Here, we demonstrate a strategy for such analyses utilizing a combination of stable isotope chemical labeling and tandem mass spectrometry. Phosphoproteins of interest are isolated from two sets of animals that have undergone differential drug treatments, separated by SDS-PAGE, excised, and subjected to in-gel enzymatic digestion. Using a simple chemical labeling step, we introduce stable, isotopically distinct mass tags into each of the two sets of peptides that originate from the samples under comparison, mix the samples, and subject the resulting mixture to a procedure based on our previously reported hypothesis-driven multistage MS (HMS-MS) method (Chang, E. J.; Archambault, V.; McLachlin, D. T.; Krutchinsky, A. N.; Chait, B. T. Anal. Chem. 2004, 76, 4472-4483). The method takes advantage of the dominant loss of H3PO4 during MS/MS from singly charged phosphopeptide ions produced by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) in the ion trap mass spectrometer. In the present work, quantitation is achieved by isolating the range of m/z values that include both isotopic forms of the putative phosphopeptide and measuring the relative intensities of the two resulting -98-Da fragment ion peaks. This MS/MS measurement can be repeated on the same MALDI sample for all potential phosphopeptide ion pairs that we hypothesize might be produced from the protein under study. Use of MS/MS for quantitation greatly increases the sensitivity of the method and allows us to measure relatively low levels of phosphorylation, phosphopeptides, or both that are not easily observable by single-stage MS. We apply the current method to the determination of changes in the levels of phosphorylation in DARPP-32 from the mouse striatum upon treatment of animals with psychostimulant drugs.  相似文献   

10.
Immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) is a useful method to selectively isolate and enrich phosphopeptides from a peptide mixture. Mass spectrometry is a very suitable method for exact molecular weight determination of IMAC-isolated phosphopeptides, due to its inherent high sensitivity. Even exact molecular weight determination, however, is not sufficient for identification of the phosphorylation site if more than one potential phosphorylation site is present on a peptide. The previous method of choice for sequencing the affinity-bound peptides was electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). This method required elution and salt removal prior to MS analysis of the peptides, which can lead to sample loss. Using a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) source coupled to an orthogonal injection quadrupole time-of-flight (QqTOF) mass spectrometer with true MS/MS capabilities, direct sequencing of IMAC-enriched peptides has been performed on IMAC beads applied directly to the MALDI target. The utility of this new method has been demonstrated on a protein with unknown phosphorylation sites, where direct MALDI-MS/MS of the tryptic peptides bound to the IMAC beads resulted in the identification of two novel phosphopeptides. Using this technique, the phosphorylation site determination is unambiguous, even with a peptide containing four potentially phosphorylated residues. Direct analysis of phosphorylated peptides on IMAC beads does not adversely affect the high-mass accuracy of an orthogonal injection QqTOF mass spectrometer, making it a suitable technique for phosphoproteomics.  相似文献   

11.
We describe a strategy, which we term hypothesis-driven multiple-stage mass spectrometry (HMS-MS), for the sensitive detection and identification of phosphopeptides derived from enzymatic digests of phosphoproteins. In this strategy, we postulate that any or all of the potential sites of phosphorylation in a given protein may be phosphorylated. Using this assumption, we calculate the m/z values of all the corresponding singly charged phosphopeptide ions that could, in theory, be produced by the enzyme employed for proteolysis. We test ions at these m/z values for the presence of phosphoserine or phosphothreonine residues using tandem mass spectrometry (MS(2)) in a vacuum MALDI ion trap mass spectrometer, where the neutral loss of the elements of H(3)PO(4) (98 Da) provides a sensitive assay for the presence of phosphopeptides. Subsequent MS(3) analysis of the (M + H - 98)(+) peaks allows us to confirm or reject the hypotheses that the putative phosphopeptides are present in the sample. HMS-MS was successfully applied to the detection and identification of phosphopeptides from substrates of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) Cdc28, phosphorylated in vitro (Ipl1) and in vivo (Orc6), basing hypothesis formation on the minimal Cdk consensus phosphorylation motif Ser/Thr-Pro. The method was also used to find in vitro phosphopeptides from a domain of the Drosophila melanogaster protein PERIOD, hypothesizing possible phosphorylations of all Ser/Thr residues without assuming a consensus motif. Our results demonstrate that HMS-MS is a sensitive, highly specific tool for systematically surveying proteins for Ser/Thr phosphorylation, and represents a significant step toward our goal of comprehensive phosphorylation mapping.  相似文献   

12.
A new methodology, matrix-enhanced secondary ion mass spectrometry (ME-SIMS), is reported for the molecular analysis of biomaterials. The technique applies static secondary ion mass spectrometry (SSIMS) techniques to samples prepared in a solid organic matrix similar to sample preparations used in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI). Molecular ions are observed in this ion beam sputtering of organic mixtures for peptides and oligonucleotides up to masses on the order of 10?000 Da. This matrix-enhanced SIMS exhibits substantial increases in the ionization efficiency of selected analyte molecules compared to conventional SSIMS processes. Thus, higher mass peptides, proteins, and nucleic acids become accessible to near-surface analysis by ion beam techniques, and subpicomole sensitivity has been demonstrated. A number of matrices were examined for their efficiency in ME-SIMS applications, and these initial matrix studies focused on common MALDI matrices and their isomers. The results of this survey indicate that 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid provides the best general enhancement of molecular secondary ions emitted from analyte/matrix mixtures.  相似文献   

13.
We report a new method called metal affinity capture that when coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (MAC-MSMS) allows for the selective detection and identification of phosphopeptides in complex mixtures. Phosphopeptides are captured as ternary complexes with Ga(III) or Fe(III) and N(alpha),N(alpha)-bis(carboxymethyl)lysine (LysNTA) in solution and electrosprayed as doubly or triply charged positive ions. The gas-phase complexes uniformly dissociate to produce a common (LysNTA + H)+ ion that is used as a specific marker in precursor ion scans. The advantages of MAC-MSMS over the current methods of phosphopeptide detection are as follows. (1) MAC-MSMS uses metal complexes that self-assemble in solution at pH <5, which is favorable for the production of positive ions by electrospray. (2) Phosphorylation at tyrosine, serine, and threonine is detected by MAC-MSMS. (3) The phosphopeptide peaks in the mass spectra are encoded with the 69Ga-71Ga isotope pattern for selective recognition in mixtures. Detection by MAC-MSMS of singly and multiply phosphorylated peptides in tryptic digests is demonstrated at low-nanomolar protein concentrations.  相似文献   

14.
Hanton SD  Liu XM 《Analytical chemistry》2000,72(19):4550-4554
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry is an important technique to characterize the average molecular weights, oligomer repeat units, and end groups of polymer materials. Although MALDI methods have been developed for a broad variety of different synthetic polymers, MALDI continues to struggle with polymer samples having broad polydispersity (PD). We have combined MALDI and gel permeation chromatography (GPC) analyses for broad PD polymer samples with the use of a liquid chromatography (LC) interface. The LC interface uses heated sheath gas and a capillary nozzle to remove most of the mobile phase and deposit the GPC eluants on the precoated matrix on a moving MALDI plate. Our experiments demonstrate that the combination of GPC-LC interface-MALDI can aid in the characterization of broad PD samples, the verification of the presence of low-intensity, high-mass oligomers, and the detection of minor series in polymer samples.  相似文献   

15.
This study reports the synthesis of the first functional cleavable detergent designed specifically for applications in mass spectrometry. Upon cleavage, two inert compounds and the MALDI matrix are formed, eliminating sources of potential interference originating from traditional cleavable detergents. Analysis of peptides demonstrates that MALDI matrix generated in situ results in MALDI spectra equivalent to those prepared using established protocols. Analysis of the membrane protein diacylglycerol kinase was accomplished using the combination detergent/MALDI matrix. Applications of the functional cleavable detergents to the profiling of whole cell lysates results in increased signal-to-noise ratios of many ions and the detection of additional proteins previously not observed.  相似文献   

16.
Although immobilization of antigen-specific immunoglobulins onto matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) targets allows the specific detection and enrichment of an antigen from complex biological fluids, the process of antibody immobilization is not optimal. The principal reason is that the antibody can bind to the template in various orientations, many of which block antigen recognition. An affinity capture MALDI mass spectrometry methodology was developed by covalently immobilizing an Fc receptor (recombinant protein G) onto MALDI gold targets for the purpose of orientating an immunoglobulin G, with the Fab domains pointing away from the target surface. The pregnancy and cancer marker, human chorionic gonadotropin beta core fragment (hCGbetacf), was our chosen test substance. To optimize the methodology, different surface densities of protein G and immunoglobulin were achieved by employing varying concentrations for immobilization. Captured amounts of hCGbetacf were compared using an external standard (cytochrome c). Orientation of immunoglobulin resulted in an approximately 3-fold increase in MALDI signal compared to using randomly immobilized antibody. Higher antibody concentrations resulted in diminished MALDI signals, which were explained by steric hindrance. Purification and enrichment of hCGbetacf was achieved from a test solution containing contaminant peptides and proteins using oriented immunoglobulins on-target.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphopeptides are often detected with low efficiency by MALDI MS analysis of peptide mixtures. In an effort to improve the phosphopeptide ion response in MALDI MS, we investigated the effects of adding low concentrations of organic and inorganic acids during peptide sample preparation in 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (2,5-DHB) matrix. Phosphoric acid in combination with 2,5-DHB matrix significantly enhanced phosphopeptide ion signals in MALDI mass spectra of crude peptide mixtures derived from the phosphorylated proteins alpha-casein and beta-casein. The beneficial effects of adding up to 1% phosphoric acid to 2,5-DHB were also observed in LC-MALDI-MS analysis of tryptic phosphopeptides of B. subtilis PrkC phosphoprotein. Finally, the mass resolution of MALDI mass spectra of intact proteins was significantly improved by using phosphoric acid in 2,5-DHB matrix.  相似文献   

18.
Detection of doping agents in urine frequently requires extensive separation prior to chemical analyses. Gas or liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry has produced accurate and sensitive assays, but chromatographic separations require time and, sometimes, chemical derivatization. To avoid such tedious and lengthy procedures, vacuum matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (vMALDI) coupled with the linear ion trap mass spectrometry (LIT/MS) technique is tested for its applicability as a rapid screening technique. Commonly used doping agents like nandrolone, boldenone, trenbolone, testosterone, and betamethasone were chosen as study compounds. Different MALDI matrixes like alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA), dihyroxy benzoic acid (DHB) with and without cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB), a surfactant, and meso-tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl) porphyrin (F20TPP) were tested. Among them, F20TPP (MW 974.57 Da) was selected as the preferred matrix owing to the lack of interfering matrix peaks at the lower mass range (m/z 100-700). Urine samples spiked with study compounds were processed by solid-phase extraction (SPE) and consistently detected through a linear range of 0.1-100 ng/mL. The limit of detection and lower limit of quantification for all five analytes have been determined to be 0.03 and 0.1 ng/mL, respectively, in urine samples. Testosterone-d3 was used as an internal standard, and the quantitative measurements were achieved by the selective reaction monitoring (SRM) mode. The method was validated and showed consistency in the results. Hence, vMALDI-LIT/MS can be used as a rapid screening method to complement the traditional GC/MS and LC/MS techniques for simultaneous identification, confirmation, and quantification of doping agents in urine.  相似文献   

19.
Monobromobimane (MBB) is a lipophilic reagent that selectively modifies free cysteine residues in proteins. Because of its lipophilic character, MBB is capable of labeling cysteine residues in membrane proteins under native conditions. Reaction of MBB with the sulfhydryl groups of free cysteines leads to formation of highly fluorescent derivatives. Here we describe a procedure for the detection and relative quantitation of MBB-labeled cysteines using fluorescence and mass spectrometric analyses, which allow determination of free cysteine content and unambiguous identification of MBB-modified cysteine residues. We have applied this approach to the analysis of the free and redox-sensitive cysteine residues of a large membrane protein, the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release channel with a molecular mass of 2.2 million Da. Labeling was performed under physiologic conditions where the channel complex is in its native environment and is functionally active. The purified MBB-labeled channel complex was enzymatically digested, and the resulting peptides were separated by reversed-phase high-performance chromatography. MBB-labeled peptides were detected by fluorescence and identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. Under MALDI conditions, partial photolytic fragmentation of the MBB-peptide bound occurred, thus allowing convenient screening for the MBB-modified peptides in the MS spectrum by detection of the specific mass increment of 190.07 Da for MBB-modified cysteine residues. Modification of the peptides was further confirmed by tandem mass spectrometric analysis, utilizing sequencing information and the presence of the specific immonium ion for the MBB-modified cysteine residues at m/z 266.6. Quantitative information was obtained by comparison of both fluorescence and MS signal intensities of MBB-modified peptides. Combination of fluorescence with MS detection and analysis of MBB-labeled peptides supported by a customized software program provides a convenient method for identifying and quantifying redox-sensitive cysteines in membrane proteins of native biological systems. Identification of one redox-sensitive cysteine (2327) in the native membrane-bound sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release channel is described.  相似文献   

20.
Shen W  Xiong H  Xu Y  Cai S  Lu H  Yang P 《Analytical chemistry》2008,80(17):6758-6763
A fast solid-phase microextraction method using core-shell ZnO-poly (methyl methacrylate) nanobeads (ZnO-PMMA) as adsorbent was established. This fast method with high enriching efficiency and salt tolerance capability depends on the structure of the core-shell nanobeads. First, the large surface area of the PMMA shell makes the dispersive nanobeads capture samples quickly, by virtue of multi-interactions between ZnO-PMMA and samples except for the interaction with salts. Second, the small nanosize of the ZnO-core (2.1 nm) and the flexible hydrophobic PMMA shell, which can prevent the cores from aggregation, make the nanobeads form a homogeneous layer on the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) plate and do not hinder the cocrystallization of the matrix and samples. Third, the ZnO core also prevents PMMA from fragmentation and ionization in mass spectrometer. In this article, approximately 80% bovine serum albumin digests were enriched by ZnO-PMMA from 100 amol/muL solution within 10-min incubation, and the solid phase can be directly analyzed by MALDI mass spectrometry. Mass intensity can be increased 5-10-fold (ZnO-PMMA enrichment vs lyophilization). High-quality mass spectra can be obtained, even with the presence of saturated NaCl (6.2 M), saturated NH 4HCO 3 (2.6 M), or 1 M urea. This method has been successfully applied to human colorectal cancer proteome research, and eight new proteins have been found.  相似文献   

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