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Fragment Ion Abundance Reveals Information about Structure and Charge Localization in Highly Charged Proteins.

Abstract

Top-down mass spectrometry (MS) is a versatile tool that has been employed to investigate both protein sequence and structure. Although a variety of different fragmentation methods are available in top-down MS that can potentially yield structural information, quantifying differences between spectra remains challenging. Herein, we show that subtle differences in spectra produced by a variety of fragmentation methods are surprisingly sensitive to protein structure and/or charge localization, even in highly unfolded proteins observed in high charge states. In addition to exposing information about the protein structure, differences in fragmentation also reveal insight into the mechanisms underlying the dissociation methods themselves. The results further reveal that small changes in experimental parameters (such as the addition of methanol instead of acetonitrile) lead to changes in structure that are reflected in statistically reproducible differences in dissociation. Collisional annealing of structurally dissimilar ions in the gas phase eventually leads to dissociation spectra that are indistinguishable, suggesting that structural differences can be erased by sufficient thermal activation. Additional experiments illustrate that identical charge states of the same protein can be distinguished if those produced directly by electrospray are compared to ions manipulated by in vacuo proton-transfer charge reduction. Overall, the results show that subtle differences in both three-dimensional structure and charge-site localization can influence the abundance of fragment ions produced by top-down MS, including dissociation methods not typically thought to be structurally sensitive.

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