Extending top-down mass spectrometry to proteins with masses greater than 200 kilodaltons
- PMID: 17023655
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1128868
Extending top-down mass spectrometry to proteins with masses greater than 200 kilodaltons
Abstract
For characterization of sequence and posttranslational modifications, molecular and fragment ion mass data from ionizing and dissociating a protein in the mass spectrometer are far more specific than are masses of peptides from the protein's digestion. We extend the approximately 500-residue, approximately 50-kilodalton (kD) dissociation limitation of this top-down methodology by using electrospray additives, heated vaporization, and separate noncovalent and covalent bond dissociation. This process can cleave 287 interresidue bonds in the termini of a 1314-residue (144-kD) protein, specify previously unidentified disulfide bonds between 8 of 27 cysteines in a 1714-residue (200-kD) protein, and correct sequence predictions in two proteins, one with 2153 residues (229 kD).
Comment in
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Chemistry. Mass spectrometry: bottom-up or top-down?Science. 2006 Oct 6;314(5796):65-6. doi: 10.1126/science.1133987. Science. 2006. PMID: 17023639 No abstract available.
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