Back to Search Start Over

Top-down MS, a powerful complement to the high capabilities of proteolysis proteomics.

Authors :
McLafferty, Fred W.
Breuker, Kathrin
Mi Jin
Xuemei Han
Infusini, Giuseppe
Honghai Jiang
Xianglei Kong
Begley, Tadhg P.
Source :
FEBS Journal; Dec2007, Vol. 274 Issue 24, p6256-6268, 13p, 4 Diagrams, 7 Graphs
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

For the characterization of protein sequences and post-translational modifications by MS, the ‘top-down’ proteomics approach utilizes molecular and fragment ion mass data obtained by ionizing and dissociating a protein in the mass spectrometer. This requires more complex instrumentation and methodology than the far more widely used ‘bottom-up’ approach, which instead uses such data of peptides from the protein's digestion, but the top-down data are far more specific. The ESI MS spectrum of a 14 protein mixture provides full separation of its molecular ions for MS/MS dissociation of the individual components. False-positive rates for the identification of proteins are far lower with the top-down approach, and quantitation of multiply modified isomers is more efficient. Bottom-up proteolysis destroys the information on the size of the protein and the connectivities of the peptide fragments, but it has no size limit for protein digestion. In contrast, the top-down approach has a ∼ 500 residue, ∼ 50 kDa limitation for the extensive molecular ion dissociation required. Basic studies indicate that this molecular ion intractability arises from greatly strengthened electrostatic interactions, such as hydrogen bonding, in the gas-phase molecular ions. This limit is now greatly extended by variable thermal and collisional activation just after electrospray (‘prefolding dissociation’). This process can cleave 287 inter-residue bonds in the termini of a 1314 residue (144 kDa) protein, specify previously unidentified disulfide bonds between eight of 27 cysteines in a 1714 residue (200 kDa) protein, and correct sequence predictions in two proteins, one of 2153 residues (229 kDa). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1742464X
Volume :
274
Issue :
24
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
FEBS Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27700510
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2007.06147.x