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Synthesis of new SS and CC bonds by photoinitiated radical recombination reactions in the gas phase

Abstract

Photoinitiated radical chemistry has proven to be useful for breaking covalent bonds within many biomolecules in the gas phase. Herein, we demonstrate that radical chemistry is useful for bond synthesis in the gas phase. Single peptides containing two cysteine residues capped with propylmercaptan (PM) often form disulfide bonds following ultraviolet excitation at 266 nm and loss of both PM groups. Similarly, noncovalently bound peptide pairs where each peptide contains a single cysteine residue can be induced to form disulfide bonds. Comparison with disulfide bound species sampled directly from solution yields identical collisional activation spectra, suggesting that native disulfide bonds have been recapitulated in the gas phase syntheses. Another approach utilizing radical chemistry for covalent bond synthesis involves creation of a reactive diradical that can first abstract hydrogen from a target peptide, creating a new radical site, and then recombine the second radical with the new radical to form a covalent bond. This chemistry is illustrated with 2-(hydroxymethyl-3,5-diiodobenzoate)-18-crown-6 ether, which attaches noncovalently to protonated primary amines in peptides and proteins. Following photoactivation and crosslinking, the site of noncovalent adduct attachment can frequently be determined. The ramifications of these observations on peptide structure and noncovalent attachment of 18-crown-6-based molecules is discussed.

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