Site-specific analysis of gas-phase hydrogen/deuterium exchange of peptides and proteins by electron transfer dessociation

Kasper Dyrberg Rand, Steven D. Pringle, Michael Morris, Jeffery M. Brown

    49 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    To interpret the wealth of information contained in the hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX) behavior of peptides and proteins in the gas-phase, analytical tools are needed to resolve the HDX of individual exchanging sites. Here we show that ETD can be combined with fast gas-phase HDX in ND 3 gas and used to monitor the exchange of side-chain hydrogens of individual residues in both small peptide ions and larger protein ions a few milliseconds after electrospray. By employing consecutive traveling wave ion guides in a mass spectrometer, peptide and protein ions were labeled on-the-fly (0.1-10 ms) in ND3 gas and subsequently fragmented by ETD. Fragment ions were separated using ion mobility and mass analysis enabled the determination of the gas-phase deuterium uptake of individual side-chain sites in a range of model peptides of different size and sequence as well as two proteins; cytochrome C and ubiquitin. Gas-phase HDX-ETD experiments on ubiquitin ions ionized from both denaturing and native solution conditions suggest that residue-specific HDX of side-chain hydrogens is sensitive to secondary and tertiary structural features occurring in both nearnative and unfolded gas-phase conformers present shortly after electrospray. The described approach for online gas-phase HDX and ETD paves the way for making mass spectrometry techniques based on gas-phase HDX more applicable in bioanalytical research.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalAnalytical Chemistry
    Volume84
    Issue number4
    Pages (from-to)1931-1940
    ISSN0003-2700
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 21 Feb 2012

    Keywords

    • Former Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences

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