Highly homogenous α zein protein was isolated from maize kernels in an environment‐friendly process using 95% ethanol as solvent. Due to the polyploidy and genetic polymorphism of the plant source, the application of high resolution separation methods in conjunction with precise analytical methods, such as MALDI‐TOF‐MS, is required to accurately estimate homogeneity of products that contain natural zein protein. The α zein protein product revealed two main bands in SDS‐PAGE analysis, one at 25 kDa and other at 20 kDa apparent molecular mass. Yet, high resolution 2DE revealed approximately five protein spot groups in each row, the first at ca. 25 kDa and the second at ca. 20 kDa. Peptide mass fingerprinting data of the proteins in the two dominant SDS‐PAGE bands matched to 30 amino acid sequence entries out of 102 non‐redundant data base entries. MALDI‐TOF‐MS peptide mapping of the proteins from all spots indicated the presence of only α zein proteins. The most prominent ion signals in the MALDI mass spectra of the protein mixture of the 25 kDa SDS gel band after in‐gel digestion were found at m/z 1272.6 and m/z 2009.1, and the most prominent ion signals of the protein mixture of the 20 kDa band after in‐gel digestion were recorded at m/z 1083.5 and m/z 1691.8. These ion signals have been found typical for α zein proteins and may serve as marker ion signals which upon chymotryptic digestion reliably indicate the presence of α zein protein in two hybrid corn products.
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AbstractThe stoichiometries and the affinity toward simple and paired metal ions of synthetic amyloid-β(1-40)peptide (Aβ1-40) were investigated by electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), circular dichroism (CD), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The results lead to the working hypothesis that pHdependent metal binding to Aβ1-40 may induce conformational changes, which affect the affinity toward other metals. A significant copper and zinc binding to Aβ1-40 peptide at pH 5.5 was found, whereas nickel ions commonly bind to each molecule of β-amyloid peptide. Some complexes of Aβ1-40 with more than one nickel ion were identified by ESI-MS. In addition, nickel ions proved to enhance Aβ oligomerization. On increasing pH, up to 12 ions of zinc may bind to a single Aβ molecule. Under the same pH and concentration conditions, the binding pattern of the independent copper and silver ions to Aβ1-40 was different from that of the equimolecular mixture of the two metal ions. One might assume that some conformational changes due to water loss altered the capacity of Aβ peptide to bind certain heavy metal ions. As a consequence, copper-silver interaction with the binding process to Aβ1-40 became highly complex. A competition between silver and nickel ions for Aβ1-40 binding sites at high pH was also observed. New strategies were proposed to identify the characteristic signals for some important metal ion-peptide complexes in the spectra recorded at high pH or high concentrations of metal ions. To explain the formation of such a large number of high metal ion-Aβ complexes, we took into consideration the participation of both histidine residues and free amino groups as well as carboxylate ones in the binding process. Finally, CD and AFM studies supported the mass spectrometric data.
A decapeptide with high affinity toward heavy metal ions (RCHQYHHNRE) has been prepared by Fmoc strategy using TGR resin as solid support. The model peptide provides a simple system that can be used for a systematic study of the impact of different metal ions on peptide secondary structure on a molecular level; histidine residues were incorporated into the peptide in a sequence similar to beta-amyloid peptide (Abeta1-40) to generate possible complexation sites for Cu (2+) ions. The peptide secondary structure, as investigated by circular dichroism, and self-assembled nanostructures were observed to depend strongly on the presence of copper and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Atomic force microscopy (AFM) revealed also that copper and SDS affected slightly the Abeta1-40 nanostructures. An explanation for the effect of metal ions and SDS on the self-assembly of peptides was proposed. The extensive beta-sheet formation may further promote peptide self-assembly into longer fibers.
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