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Strategies for generating peptide radical cations via ion/ion reactions.

Authors :
Gilbert JD
Fisher CM
Bu J
Prentice BM
Redwine JG
McLuckey SA
Source :
Journal of mass spectrometry : JMS [J Mass Spectrom] 2015 Feb; Vol. 50 (2), pp. 418-26.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Several approaches for the generation of peptide radical cations using ion/ion reactions coupled with either collision induced dissociation (CID) or ultraviolet photo dissociation (UVPD) are described here. Ion/ion reactions are used to generate electrostatic or covalent complexes comprised of a peptide and a radical reagent. The radical site of the reagent can be generated multiple ways. Reagents containing a carbon-iodine (C-I) bond are subjected to UVPD with 266-nm photons, which selectively cleaves the C-I bond homolytically. Alternatively, reagents containing azo functionalities are collisionally activated to yield radical sites on either side of the azo group. Both of these methods generate an initial radical site on the reagent, which then abstracts a hydrogen from the peptide while the peptide and reagent are held together by either electrostatic interactions or a covalent linkage. These methods are demonstrated via ion/ion reactions between the model peptide RARARAA (doubly protonated) and various distonic anionic radical reagents. The radical site abstracts a hydrogen atom from the peptide, while the charge site abstracts a proton. The net result is the conversion of a doubly protonated peptide to a peptide radical cation. The peptide radical cations have been fragmented via CID and the resulting product ion mass spectra are compared to the control CID spectrum of the singly protonated, even-electron species. This work is then extended to bradykinin, a more broadly studied peptide, for comparison with other radical peptide generation methods. The work presented here provides novel methods for generating peptide radical cations in the gas phase through ion/ion reaction complexes that do not require modification of the peptide in solution or generation of non-covalent complexes in the electrospray process.<br /> (Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1096-9888
Volume :
50
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of mass spectrometry : JMS
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25800024
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jms.3548