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. 1996 Feb;31(2):150-8.
doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1096-9888(199602)31:2<150::AID-JMS287>3.0.CO;2-5.

Effect of the position of a basic amino acid on C-terminal rearrangement of protonated peptides upon collision-induced dissociation

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Effect of the position of a basic amino acid on C-terminal rearrangement of protonated peptides upon collision-induced dissociation

J Gonzalez et al. J Mass Spectrom. 1996 Feb.

Abstract

Internal rearrangement involving the loss of the C-terminal amino acid residue upon collision-induced dissociation (CID) or metastable decomposition was studied for protonated peptides. To investigate the structural characteristics of peptides responsible for this rearrangement, a series of synthetic peptides were prepared and subjected to B/E-linked scan or tandem mass spectrometric analyses using a four-sector instrument. The results showed that the position of a basic amino acid in the peptide sequence and its basicity have a significant influence on the rearrangement. Arginine (Arg) located at the n-1 position facilitates the rearrangement with about twice as many rearrangement ions as is observed for the other Arg-containing peptides. This can be attributed to the interaction of a positively charged guanidino group of Arg with its own carbonyl group via a salt bridge which is tightly formed in vacuo between a guanidino and carboxylate groups, the mechanism of which is analogous to that previously proposed for the formation of similar rearrangement ions observed in the spectra of metal-cationized peptides. This association would result in the facile attack of the C-terminal hydroxyl group on the penultimate carbonyl group, leading to the rearrangement. In addition, the rearrangement ion was observed both in metastable decomposition and high-energy CID spectra obtained by B/E-linked scan analyses without or with gas, respectively, but in a sequence dependent manner.

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