Design and performance of a novel hybrid mass spectrometer is described. It couples a linear ion trap mass spectrometer to an orbitrap mass analyzer via an rf-only trapping quadrupole with a curved axis. The latter injects pulsed ion beams into a rapidly changing electric field in the orbitrap wherein they are trapped at high kinetic energies around an inner electrode. Image current detection is subsequently performed after a stable electrostatic field is achieved. Fourier transformation of the acquired transient allows wide mass range detection with high resolving power, mass accuracy, and dynamic range. The entire instrument operates in LC/MS mode (1 spectrum/s) with nominal mass resolving power of 60,000 and uses automatic gain control to provide high-accuracy mass measurements, within 2 ppm using internal standards and within 5 ppm with external calibration. The maximum resolving power exceeds 100,000 (fwhm). Rapid, automated data-dependent capabilities enable real-time acquisition of up to three high-mass accuracy MS/MS spectra per second.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectra and methods to improve their quality are reported for three hydrophobic, membrane-bound proteins: porin from Escherichiu coli, bacteriorhodopsin from Halobacterium salinarium and cholesterolesterase from Pseudomonas Juorescens. Several commonly used UV and IR matrices have been tested. In addition, the susceptibility of MALDI mass spectrometry to various neutral and ionic detergents, known usually to degrade the quality of MALDI mass spectra, has been tested systematically. For porin, consisting of three identical noncovalently bound subunits, a new sample preparation is reported, resulting in the desorption of the intact quaternary protein structure. This leads to a better understanding of the way a given analyte is embedded into the host matrix crystals.
S100A8 and S100A9 are two proinflammatory molecules belonging to the S100 family of calcium-binding proteins. Common to all S100 proteins S100A8 and S100A9 form non-covalently associated complexes which have been shown to exhibit different functional properties. Besides dimerization, recent research is focused on the importance of higher oligomeric structures of S100 proteins induced by bivalent cations. While S100A8/S100A9-heterodimers are formed in the absence of calcium, tetramerization is strictly calcium-dependent. Heterodimer formation is not a simple process and our biophysical analyses (FRET, ESI-MS) demonstrate that simply mixing both subunits is not sufficient to induce complex formation. Steps of denaturation/renaturation are necessary for the recombinant complex to show identical biophysical properties as S100A8/S100A9 obtained from granulocytes. In addition to calcium both proteins are able to bind zinc with high affinity. Here we demonstrate for the first time by different biophysical methods (MALDI-MS, ESI-MS, fluorescence spectroscopy) that zinc-binding, like calcium, induces (S100A8/S100A9)(2)-tetramers. Using mass spectrometric investigations we demonstrate that zinc triggers the formation of (S100A8/S100A9)(2)-tetramers by zinc-specific binding sites rather than by interactions with calcium-specific EF-hands. The zinc-induced tetramer is structurally very similar to the calcium-induced tetramer. Thus, like calcium, zinc acts as a regulatory factor in S100A8/S100A9-dependent signaling pathways.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.