Top-Down Analysis of In-Source HDX of Native Protein Ions
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
Abstract
Hydrogen/deuterium exchange (HDX) is used in protein biophysics to probe folding dynamics, intermolecular interactions, epitope and other mapping. A typical procedure often involves HDX in buffered D2O solution followed by pepsin digestion, and liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization mass spectrometry analysis. In this work, HDX of protein ions was conducted in the ESI source. Both native electrospray droplets of ubiquitin and denatured myoglobin were exposed to D2O vapor in the source region of a Bruker SolariX 12T FTICR-mass spectrometer. Electron capture dissociation was used to assess deuterium incorporation at the residue level. This in-source HDX, on the millisecond-time scale, exchanges side-chain hydrogens and fast-exchanging amides compared to conventional minutes-to-hours HDX of backbone hydrogens in solution with less sample preparation (i.e., no D2O/protein mixing and incubation, no quenching, protein digestion, or LC separation).
First Page
1151
Last Page
1154
DOI
10.1021/jasms.9b00149
Publication Date
5-6-2020
Recommended Citation
Sanguantrakun, Nawaporn; Chanthamontri, Chamnongsak; and Gross, Michael L., "Top-Down Analysis of In-Source HDX of Native Protein Ions" (2020). Basic Sciences Faculty Publications. 26.
https://doi.org/10.1021/jasms.9b00149
https://collections.uhsp.edu/basic-sciences_pubs/26