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1.
The extension of quantitation methods for small peptides to ions above 5 kDa, and eventually to global quantitative proteomics of intact proteins, will require extensive refinement of current analytical approaches. Here we evaluate postgrowth Cys-labeling and 14N/15N metabolic labeling strategies for determination of relative protein expression levels and their posttranslational modifications using top-down mass spectrometry (MS). We show that intact proteins that are differentially alkylated with acrylamide (+71 Da) versus iodoacetamide (+57 Da) have substantial chromatographic shifts during reversed-phase liquid chromatography separation (particularly in peak tails), indicating a requirement for stable isotopes in alkylation tags for top-down MS. In the 14N/15N metabolic labeling strategy, we achieve 98% 15N incorporation in yeast grown 10 generations under aerobic conditions and determine 50 expression ratios using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance MS in comparing these cells to anaerobically grown control (14N) cells. We devise quantitative methods for top-down analyses, including a correction factor for accurate protein ratio determination based upon the signal-to-noise ratio. Using a database of 200 yeast protein forms identified previously by top-down MS, we verify the intact mass tag concept for protein identification without tandem MS. Overall, we find that top-down MS promises work flows capable of large-scale proteome profiling using stable isotope labeling and the determination of >5 protein ratios per spectrum.  相似文献   

2.
Non-gel-based dual 18O labeling quantitative proteomics strategy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Liu H  Zhang Y  Meng L  Qin P  Wei J  Jia W  Li X  Cai Y  Qian X 《Analytical chemistry》2007,79(20):7700-7707
To improve the quantitation of target proteins in proteomic analyses, we developed a non-gel-based, dual (18)O labeling strategy. This global isotope labeling method utilizes an acylating chemical reagent with two anhydride functional groups, bicyclic anhydride diethylenetriamine-N,N,N', N' ',N' '-pentaacetic acid (DTPA) dianhydride. In the first (18)O labeling method (chemical (18)O labeling) of our dual strategy, one functional group was covalently coupled to the primary amines of the peptides and (18)O from H2(18)O was incorporated at the other functional group by hydrolysis. In the second (18)O labeling method (chemical and enzyme-catalyzed (18)O labeling), chemical (18)O labeling and enzyme-catalyzed (18)O labeling of the carboxyl- termini of the peptides were combined. The acylation reaction between DTPA and the model peptides was rapid and specific, and the DTPA-modified N-termini of the peptides promoted only y-series ions in MS/MS. The two methods of (18)O labeling were accurate in the range 0.1-10 of (16)O/(18)O peptide ratios. The deviations of the methods were <20%. In contrast to current proteolytic (18)O labeling methods, there was no (18)O to (16)O back-exchange in the first method and no isotope peaks in MS in the second method. The combination of chemical and proteolytic (18)O labeling improved the confidence of the quantitation results.  相似文献   

3.
Quantitative mass spectrometry using stable isotope-labeled tagging reagents such as isotope-coded affinity tags has emerged as a powerful tool for identification and relative quantitation of proteins in current proteomic studies. Here we describe an integrated approach using both automated two-dimensional liquid chromatography/ mass spectrometry (2D-LC/MS) and a novel class of chemically modified resins, termed acid-labile isotope-coded extractants (ALICE), for quantitative mass spectrometric analysis of protein mixtures. ALICE contains a thiol-reactive group that is used to capture all cysteine (Cys)-containing peptides from peptide mixtures, an acid-labile linker, and a nonbiological polymer. The acid-labile linker is synthesized in both heavy and light isotope-coded forms and therefore enables the direct relative quantitation of peptides/proteins through mass spectrometric analysis. To test the ALICE method for quantitative protein analysis, two model protein mixtures were fully reduced, alkylated, and digested in solution separately and then Cys-containing peptides covalently captured by either light or heavy ALICE. The reacted light and heavy ALICE were mixed and washed extensively under rigorous conditions and the Cys-containing peptides retrieved by mild acid-catalyzed elution. Finally, the eluted peptides were directly subjected to automated 2D-LC/MS for protein identification and LC/MS for accurate relative quantitation. Our initial study showed that quantitation of protein mixtures using ALICE was accurate. In addition, isolation of Cys-containing peptides by the ALICE method was robust and specific and thus yielded very low background in mass spectrometric studies. Overall, the use of ALICE provides improved dynamic range and sensitivity for quantitative mass spectrometric analysis of peptide or protein mixtures.  相似文献   

4.
One of the major unanswered questions in quantitative proteomics is that of dynamic protein turnover in the cell. Here we present a new approach to quantitative proteomics that measures the relative dynamic turnover of proteins in cellular systems. In this approach, termed synthesis/degradation ratio mass spectrometry, stable isotope labeling is employed to calculate a relative synthesis/degradation ratio that reflects the relative rate at which 13C is incorporated into individual proteins in the cell. This synthesis/degradation ratio calculation is based on a Poisson distribution model that is designed to support high-throughput analysis. Protein separation and analysis is accomplished by utilizing one-dimensional SDS-PAGE gel electrophoresis followed by cutting the gel into a series of bands for in-gel digestion. The resulting peptide mixtures are analyzed via solid-phase MALDI LC-MS and LC-MS/MS using a tandem time-of-flight mass spectrometer. A portion of the soluble protein fraction from an E. coli K-12 strain was analyzed with synthesis/degradation ratios varying from approximately 0.1 to 4.4 for a variety of different proteins. Unlike other quantitative techniques, synthesis/degradation ratio mass spectrometry requires only a single cell culture to obtain useful biological information about the processes occurring inside a cell. This technique is highly amenable to shotgun proteomics-based approaches and thus should allow relative turnover measurements for whole proteomes in the future.  相似文献   

5.
Online liquid chromatography-mass spectrometric (LC-MS) analysis of intact proteins (i.e., top-down proteomics) is a growing area of research in the mass spectrometry community. A major advantage of top-down MS characterization of proteins is that the information of the intact protein is retained over the vastly more common bottom-up approach that uses protease-generated peptides to search genomic databases for protein identification. Concurrent to the emergence of top-down MS characterization of proteins has been the development and implementation of the stable isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) method for relative quantification of proteins by LC-MS. Herein we describe the qualitative and quantitative top-down characterization of proteins derived from SILAC-labeled Aspergillus flavus using nanoflow reversed-phase liquid chromatography directly coupled to a linear ion trap Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer (nLC-LTQ-FTICR-MS). A. flavus is a toxic filamentous fungus that significantly impacts the agricultural economy and human health. SILAC labeling improved the confidence of protein identification, and we observed 1318 unique protein masses corresponding to 659 SILAC pairs, of which 22 were confidently identified. However, we have observed some limiting issues with regard to protein quantification using top-down MS/MS analyses of SILAC-labeled proteins. The role of SILAC labeling in the presence of competing endogenously produced amino acid residues and its impact on quantification of intact species are discussed in detail.  相似文献   

6.
Nie AY  Zhang L  Yan GQ  Yao J  Zhang Y  Lu HJ  Yang PY  He FC 《Analytical chemistry》2011,83(15):6026-6033
Quantitative proteomics is one of the research hotspots in the proteomics field and presently maturing rapidly into an important branch. The two most typical quantitative methods, stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) and isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ), have been widely and effectively applied in solving various biological and medical problems. Here, we describe a novel quantitative strategy, termed "IVTAL", for in vivo termini amino acid labeling, which combines some advantages of the two methods above. The core of this strategy is a set of heavy amino acid (13)C(6)-arginine and (13)C(6)-lysine and specific endoproteinase Lys-N and Arg-C that yield some labeled isobaric peptides by cell culture and enzymatic digestion, which are indistinguishable in the MS scan but exhibit multiple MS/MS reporter b, y ion pairs in a full mass range that support quantitation. Relative quantification of cell states can be achieved by calculating the intensity ratio of the corresponding reporter b, y ions in the MS/MS scan. The experimental analysis for various proportions of mixed HeLa cell samples indicated that the novel strategy showed an abundance of reliable quantitative information, a high sensitivity, and a good dynamic range of nearly 2 orders of magnitude. IVTAL, as a highly accurate and reliable quantitative proteomic approach, is expected to be compatible with any cell culture system and to be especially effective for the analysis of multiple post-translational modificational sites in one peptide.  相似文献   

7.
Measuring dynamics of proteins abundance in cells in response to stimuli such as growth factors or drugs requires analysis of more than one time point. Proteomic approaches have traditionally been used to measure only one state at a time because quantitation is difficult, especially when mass spectrometry is used as a readout. Isotopically labeled reagents have recently been introduced that allow comparison of two or three different states by mass spectrometry. Here, we evaluate the reproducibility of an experiment that measures three states simultaneously through stable isotope labeling of cells with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) using light, medium, and heavy versions of amino acids. The major goal of this study was to assess the reproducibility of such experiments in combination with liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Our results show that it is possible to obtain reproducible quantitative data to study protein dynamics based on our analysis of more than 220 peptide sets derived from 20 proteins from 3 different LC-MS/MS runs.  相似文献   

8.
Quantitative proteome analysis has become a versatile tool to understand biological functions. Although stable isotope labeling is the most reliable method for quantitative mass spectrometry, preparation of isotope-labeled compounds is time-consuming and expensive. Simple label-free approaches have been introduced, but intensity-based quantitation without standards is not generally accepted as reliable, especially for small molecules. We have developed a novel label-free quantitative proteome analysis using pseudo internal standards (PISs). This idea was derived from northern blotting analysis, in which housekeeping genes are used as standards to normalize and compare target gene expression levels in different samples. In many proteomics studies, most proteins do not change their expression levels under different conditions, and therefore, these proteins can be employed as pseudo internal standards. This new approach is simple and does not require additional standards or labeling reagents. The PIS method represents a novel approach for mass spectrometry-based comprehensive quantitatitation and may also be applicable to quantitative metabolome analysis.  相似文献   

9.
Chen Z  Wang Q  Lin L  Tang Q  Edwards JL  Li S  Liu S 《Analytical chemistry》2012,84(6):2908-2915
Isobaric tags have broad applications in both basic and translational research, as demonstrated by the widely used isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ). Recent results from large-scale quantitative proteomics projects, however, indicate that protein quantification by iTRAQ is often biased in complex biological samples. Here, we report the application of another isobaric tag, deuterium isobaric amine reactive tag (DiART), for quantifying the proteome of Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis (T. tengcongensis), a thermophilic bacterium first discovered in China. We compared the performance of DiART with iTRAQ from several different aspects, including their fragmentation mechanisms, the number of identified proteins, and the accuracy of quantification. Our results revealed that, as compared with iTRAQ, DiART yielded significantly stronger reporter ions, which did not reduce the number of identifiable peptides, but improved the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) for quantification. Remarkably, we found that, under identical chromatography and mass spectrometry (MS) conditions, DiART exhibited less reporter ions ratio compression than iTRAQ, probably due to more reporter ions with higher intensities produced by DiART labeling. Taken together, we demonstrate that DiART is a valuable alternative of iTRAQ with enhanced performance for quantitative proteomics.  相似文献   

10.
Current methodologies for protein quantitation include 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis techniques, metabolic labeling, and stable isotope labeling methods to name only a few. The current literature illustrates both pros and cons for each of the previously mentioned methodologies. Keeping with the teachings of William of Ockham, "with all things being equal the simplest solution tends to be correct", a simple LC/MS based methodology is presented that allows relative changes in abundance of proteins in highly complex mixtures to be determined. Utilizing a reproducible chromatographic separations system along with the high mass resolution and mass accuracy of an orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer, the quantitative comparison of tens of thousands of ions emanating from identically prepared control and experimental samples can be made. Using this configuration, we can determine the change in relative abundance of a small number of ions between the two conditions solely by accurate mass and retention time. Employing standard operating procedures for both sample preparation and ESI-mass spectrometry, one typically obtains under 5 ppm mass precision and quantitative variations between 10 and 15%. The principal focus of this paper will demonstrate the quantitative aspects of the methodology and continue with a discussion of the associated, complementary qualitative capabilities.  相似文献   

11.
Advances in Fourier transform mass spectrometry have made the acquisition of high-resolution and accurate mass measurements routine on a chromatographic time scale. Here we report an algorithm, Hardkl?r, for the rapid and robust analysis of high-resolution mass spectra acquired in shotgun proteomics experiments. Our algorithm is demonstrated in the analysis of an Escherichia coli enriched membrane fraction. The mass spectrometry data of the respective peptides are acquired by microcapillary HPLC on an LTQ-orbitrap mass spectrometer with data-dependent acquisition of MS/MS spectra. Hardkl?r detects 211,272 total peptide isotope distributions over a 2-h analysis (75-min gradient) in only a small fraction of the time required to acquire the data. From these data there are 13,665 distinct, chromatographically persistent peptide isotope distributions. Hardkl?r is also used to assess the quality of the product ion spectra and finds that more than 11.2% of the MS/MS spectra are composed of fragment ions from multiple different molecular species. Additionally, a method is reported that enzymatically labels N-linked glycosylation sites on proteins, creating a unique isotope signature that can be detected with Hardkl?r. Using the protein invertase, Hardkl?r identifies 18O-labeled peptide isotope distributions of four glycosylation sites. The speed and robustness of the algorithm create a versatile tool that can be used in many different areas of mass spectrometry data analysis.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Chen SH  Hsu JL  Lin FS 《Analytical chemistry》2008,80(13):5251-5259
Fluorescence-based tagging in proteomics is useful in tracking and quantifying target proteins during sample preparation or chromatographic processes. In this study, we report a novel cysteinyl tagging method using a popular fluorophore, fluorescein derivative. Such visible dyes were shown to have multiple unique characteristics, including a unique reporter ion containing the dye moiety caused by collision-induced dissociation (CID) and high affinity toward multicarboxylate functional groups, which could be useful for enhanced selectivity in MS-based proteomics. We used sulfhydryl-reactive 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein to target cysteinyl residues on the intact protein of ovalbumin and bovine serum albumin as well as proteins in MCF-7 cells. After trypsin digestion, the digests were analyzed by nanoLC-ESI-Q-TOF or MALDI-TOF. The resulting MS spectra of tryptic fragments were similar to those of unlabeled or iodoacetamide-derivatized proteins, and the MS/MS fragmentation of all fluorescein-tagged peptides was readily interpretable with intact label. Thus, fluorescein-derivatized proteins can be identified by automatic mass mapping or peptide sequencing with high confidence. It is notable that, in MS/MS mode, a strong reporter ion (m/z 422) containing the fluorescein moiety was readily detected and was believed to derive from the immonium fragment of fluorescein-labeled cysteine residues, f C (m/z 463), under CID conditions. Using a precursor scan of the reporter ion, a cysteinyl protein, ovomucoid, was identified to be present in the ovalbumin sample as an impurity. The fluorescein derivatives were further shown to have high affinities toward metal-chelating materials that have iminodiacetic acid functional groups either with or without the presence of bound metal ions. When coupling with stable isotope dimethyl labeling, fluorescein-tagged peptides could be selectively enriched, identified, and quantified. In view of its popularity, visible tracking, and unique characteristics for developing selective methods, fluorescein tagging holds great promises for targeting proteomics.  相似文献   

14.
Global amine and acid functional group modification of proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A sequential reaction methodology is employed for the complete derivatization of protein thiols, amines, and acids in high purity under denaturing conditions. Following standard thiol alkylation, protein amines are modified via reductive methylation with formaldehyde and pyridine-borane. Protein acids are subsequently amidated under buffered conditions in DMSO using the coupling reagent (7-azabenzotriazol-1-yloxy)tripyrrolidinophosphonium hexafluorophosphate. The generality of the approach is demonstrated with four proteins and with several amines yielding near-quantitative transformations as characterized by high-resolution Fourier transform mass spectrometry. The developed approach has numerous implications for protein characterization and general protein chemistry. Applications in mass spectrometry (MS) based proteomics of intact proteins (top-down MS) are explored, including the addition of stable isotopes for relative quantitation and protein identification through functional group counting. The methodology can be used for altering the physical and chemical properties of proteins, as demonstrated with amidation to modify protein isoelectric point and through derivatization with quaternary amines. Additionally, the chemistry has applications in the semisynthesis of monodisperse polymers based on protein scaffolds. We prepare proteins modified with azides and alkynes to enable further functionalization via copper(I)-catalyzed 1,3-dipolar Huisgen cycloaddition ("click") chemistry.  相似文献   

15.
A new method for proteolytic stable isotope labeling is introduced to provide quantitative and concurrent comparisons between individual proteins from two entire proteome pools or their subfractions. Two 18O atoms are incorporated universally into the carboxyl termini of all tryptic peptides during the proteolytic cleavage of all proteins in the first pool. Proteins in the second pool are cleaved analogously with the carboxyl termini of the resulting peptides containing two 16O atoms (i.e., no labeling). The two peptide mixtures are pooled for fractionation and separation, and the masses and isotope ratios of each peptide pair (differing by 4 Da) are measured by high-resolution mass spectrometry. Short sequences and/or accurate mass measurements combined with proteomics software tools allow the peptides to be related to the precursor proteins from which they are derived. Relative signal intensities of paired peptides quantify the expression levels of their precursor proteins from proteome pools to be compared, using an equation described in the paper. Observation of individual (unpaired) peptides is mainly interpreted as differential modification or sequence variation for the protein from the respective proteome pool. The method is evaluated here in a comparison of virion proteins for two serotypes (Ad5 and Ad2) of adenovirus, taking advantage of information already available about protein sequences and concentrations. In general, proteolytic 18O labeling enables a shotgun approach for proteomic studies with quantitation capability and is proposed as a useful tool for comparative proteomic studies of very complex protein mixtures.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The throughput of proteomics measurements that provide broad protein coverage is limited by the quality and speed of both the separations as well as the subsequent mass spectrometric analysis; at present, analysis times can range anywhere from hours (high throughput) to days or longer (low throughput). We have explored the basis for proteomics analyses conducted on the order of minutes using high-speed capillary RPLC combined through on-line electrospray ionization interface with high-accuracy mass spectrometry (MS) measurements. Short 0.8-microm porous C18 particle-packed 50-microm-i.d. capillaries were used to speed the RPLC separations while still providing high-quality separations. Both time-of-flight (TOF) and Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) MS were applied for identifying peptides using the accurate mass and time (AMT) tag approach. Peptide RPLC relative retention (elution) times that were generated by solvent gradients that differed by at least 25-fold were found to provide relative elution times that agreed to within 5%, which provides the basis for using peptide AMT tags for higher throughput proteomics measurements. For fast MS acquisition speeds (e.g., 0.2 s for TOF and either approximately 0.3 or approximately 0.6 s for FTICR), peptide mass measurement accuracies of better than +/-15 ppm were obtained with the high-speed RPLC separations. The ability to identify peptides and the overall proteome coverage was determined by factors that include the separation peak capacity, the sensitivity of the MS (with fast scanning), and the accuracy of both the mass measurements and the relative RPLC peptide elution times. The experimental RPLC relative elution time accuracies of 5% (using high-speed capillary RPLC) and mass measurement accuracies of better than +/-15 ppm allowed for the confident identification of >2800 peptides and >760 proteins from >13,000 different putative peptides detected from a Shewanellaoneidensis tryptic digest. Initial results for both RPLC-ESI-TOF and RPLC-ESI-FTICR MS were similar, with approximately 2000 different peptides from approximately 600 different proteins identified within 2-3 min. For <120-s proteomic analysis, TOF MS analyses were more effective, while FTICR MS was more effective for the >150-s analysis due to the improved mass accuracies attained using longer spectrum acquisition times.  相似文献   

18.
Mass-balanced (1)H/(2)H isotope dipeptide tags (MBITs) are presented for simultaneous protein quantitation and identification. MBIT is derived from N-acetyl-Ala-Ala dipeptide and conjugated to primary amines of target peptides. (1)H/(2)H isotopes are encoded in the methyl groups of N-acetylated dipeptide: one tag deuterated on the N-acetyl group and another on the C-terminal alanine. MBIT-linked peptides comigrate in reversed-phase liquid chromatography without significant (1)H/(2)H isotope effects and provide 2-plex quantitation signals at 114 and 117 Th as well as peptide sequence information upon MS/MS analysis with MALDI TOF/TOF. MBIT shows good quantitation linearity in a concentration range of 20-250 fmol. The performance of MBIT on protein quantitation and identification is further tested with yeast heat-shock protein (Hsp82p) obtained from three different physiological states. MBIT using nanogram-scale samples produces the relative abundance ratios comparable to those obtained from optical imaging of microgram-scale samples visualized with SYPRO Ruby stain. The MBIT strategy is a simple and low-cost alternative for 2-plex quantitation of proteins and offers possibilities of tuning the 2-plex signal mass window by replacing the N-terminal alanine with other amino acid residues.  相似文献   

19.
The analysis of protein interactors in protein complexes can yield important insight into protein function and signal transduction. Thus, a reliable approach to distinguish true interactors from nonspecific interacting proteins is of utmost importance for accurate data interpretation. Although stringent purification methods are critical, challenges still remain in the selection of criteria that will permit the objective differentiation of true members of the protein complex from nonspecific background proteins. To address these challenges, we have developed a quantitative proteomic strategy combining stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC), affinity substrate trapping, and gel electrophoresis followed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (geLC-MS/MS) protein quantitation. ATP hydrolysis-deficient vacuolar protein sorting-associated protein 4B (Vps4B) was used as the "bait" protein which served as a substrate trap since its lack of ATP hydrolysis enzymatic activity allows the stabilization of its transiently associated interacting proteins. A significant advantage of our approach is the use of our new in-house-developed software program for SILAC-based mass spectrometry quantitation, which further facilitates the differentiation between the bait protein, endogenous bait-interacting proteins, and nonspecific binding proteins based on their protein ratios. The strategy presented herein is applicable to the analysis of other protein complexes whose compositions are dependent upon the ATP hydrolysis activity of the bait protein used in affinity purification studies.  相似文献   

20.
The importance of DNA as a regulatory analyte is well-known. Recent years have seen an increased interest in the quantitation of this analyte. Accurate quantitative measurements have been hampered by the lack of well-characterized standards and pure materials for this large-molecular-weight analyte. Outlined here is an approach for the accurate and reproducible quantitation of an oligonucleotide that is solely reliant on the availability of pure, well-characterized deoxynucleotides and not a sequence-specific pure DNA standard. The proposed procedure is intended to provide an accurate and definitive method for the quantitation of DNA for reference measurements as an improved alternative to the more conventional UV absorbance-based methods. For proof of concept, a gravimetrically prepared oligonucleotide solution was enzymatically digested to its constituent monomer-deoxynucleotide monophosphates (dNMPs), of which there are four different types. Qualitative mass spectrometry was used to confirm the 100% successful completion of the enzymatic digestion step. The dNMPs were then separated by liquid chromatography (LC) before being detected by electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry (MS). The method of quantitation was based on isotope dilution mass spectrometry (IDMS) analysis of the four different monomer units. The concentrations of the four dNMP residues were then summed to obtain the original concentration of the oligonucleotide. The concentrations determined by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) and also by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) differed by <2.5 and 1%, respectively, from the gravimetrically assigned value. These differences were well within the uncertainty of the gravimetrically assigned value. This highly accurate method, suitable for the definitive quantitation of oligonucleotides, should be ideal for characterizing primary calibration standards and certified reference materials that can then be used to underpin the more conventional quantitative techniques of UV and fluorescence spectroscopy.  相似文献   

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