We describe high-efficiency (peak capacities of approximately 10(3)) nanoscale (using column inner diameters down to 15 microm) liquid chromatography (nanoLC)/low flow rate electrospray (nanoESI) mass spectrometry (MS) for the sensitive analysis of complex global cellular protein enzymatic digests (i.e., proteomics). Using a liquid slurry packing method with carefully selected packing solvents, 87-cm-length capillaries having inner diameters of 14.9-74.5 microm were successfully packed with 3-microm C18-bonded porous (300-A pores) silica particles at a pressure of 18,000 psi. With a mobile-phase delivery pressure of 10,000 psi, these packed capillaries provided mobile-phase flow rates as low as approximately 20 nL/min at LC linear velocities of approximately 0.2 cm/s, which is near optimal for separation efficiency. To maintain chromatographic efficiency, unions with internal channel diameters as small as 10 microm were specially produced for connecting packed capillaries to replaceable nanoESI emitters having orifice diameters of 2-10 microm (depending on the packed capillary dimensions). Coupled on-line with a hybrid-quadrupole time-of-flight MS through the nanoESI interface, the nanoLC separations provided peak capacities of approximately 10(3) for proteome proteolytic polypeptide mixtures when a positive feedback switching valve was used for quantitatively introducing samples. Over a relatively large range of sample loadings (e.g., 5-100 ng, and 50-500 ng of cellular proteolytic peptides for 14.9- and 29.7-microm-i.d. packed capillaries, respectively), the nanoLC/nanoESI MS response for low-abundance components of the complex mixtures was found to increase linearly with sample loading. The nanoLC/nanoESI-MS sensitivity also increased linearly with decreasing flow rate (or approximately inversely proportional to the square of the capillary inner diameter) in the flow range of 20-400 nL/min. Thus, except at the lower loadings, decreasing the separation capillary inner diameter has an effect equivalent to increasing sample loading, which is important for sample-limited proteomic applications. No significant effects on recovery of eluting polypeptides were observed using porous C18 particles with surface pores of 300-A versus nonporous particles. Tandem MS analyses were also demonstrated using the high-efficiency nanoLC separations. Chromatographic elution time, MS response intensity, and mass measurement accuracy was examined between runs with a single column (with a single nanoESI emitter), between different columns (same and different inner diameters with different nanoESI emitters), and for different samples (various concentrations of cellular proteolytic peptides) and demonstrated robust and reproducible sensitive analyses for complex proteomic samples.
We report on the design and application of a high-efficiency multiple-capillary liquid chromatography (LC) system for high-throughput proteome analysis. The multiple-capillary LC system using commercial LC pumps was operated at a pressure of 10,000 psi to deliver mobile phases through a novel passive feedback valve arrangement that permitted mobile-phase flow path switching and efficient sample introduction. The multiple-capillary LC system uses several serially connected dual-capillary column devices. The dual-capillary column approach eliminates the time delays for column regeneration (or equilibration) since one capillary column was used for a separation while the other was being washed. Several serially connected dual-capillary columns and electrospray ionization (ESI) sources were operated independently and can be used either for "backup" operation or for parallel operation with other mass spectrometers. This high-efficiency multiple-capillary LC system utilizes switching valves for all operations, enabling automated operation. The separation efficiency of the dual-capillary column arrangement, optimal capillary dimensions (column length and packed particle size), capillary regeneration conditions, and mobile-phase compositions and their compatibility with electrospray ionization were investigated. A high magnetic field (11.4 T) Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer was coupled on-line with this high-efficiency multiple-capillary LC system using an ESI interface. The capillary LC provided a peak capacity of approximately 650, and the 2-D capillary LC-FTICR analysis provided a combined resolving power of > 6 x 10(7) components. For yeast cytosolic tryptic digests > 100,000 polypeptides were detected, and approximately 1,000 proteins could be characterized from a single capillary LC-FTICR analysis using the high mass measurement accuracy (approximately 1 ppm) of FTICR, and likely more if LC retention time information were also exploited for peptide identification.
Electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry coupled with capillary reverse-phase liquid chromatography was used to characterize intact proteins from the large subunit of the yeast ribosome. High mass measurement accuracy, achieved by ''mass locking'' with an internal standard from a dual electrospray ionization source, allowed identification of ribosomal proteins. Analyses of the intact proteins revealed information on cotranslational and posttranslational modifications of the ribosomal proteins that included loss of the initiating methionine, acetylation, methylation, and proteolytic maturation. High-resolution separations permitted differentiation of protein isoforms having high structural similarity as well as proteins from their modified forms, facilitating unequivocal assignments. The study identified 42 of the 43 core large ribosomal subunit proteins and 58 (of 64 possible) core large subunit protein isoforms having unique masses in a single analysis. These results demonstrate the basis for the high-throughput analyses of complex mixtures of intact proteins, which we believe will be an important complement to other approaches for defining protein modifications and their changes resulting from physiological processes or environmental perturbations.M ass spectrometry has evolved into a powerful tool for analyzing biomolecules because of the development of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (1, 2) and electrospray ionization (ESI) (3) and advances in both mass analyzers and data processing capabilities. With these ionization methods, which are amenable to megadalton-size molecules, the broadly useful detection and characterization of biopolymers by mass spectrometric methods are feasible. For example, MS has become a preferred analytical tool for proteome analyses, in which dynamic populations of proteins are identified and quantified. Proteins are now routinely identified by mass spectrometric and tandem mass spectrometric analysis of proteolytic digests of individual protein spots on two-dimensional (2D) PAGE (4). However, the intact protein level analyses of complex protein mixtures, while potentially providing complementary and direct information for protein identification, have been a much greater experimental challenge and only rarely attempted (5, 6).Many pivotal cellular processes are not carried out by individual proteins, but rather by large protein-protein complexes and protein-nucleic acid complexes. The analyses of such complexes have been greatly expanded by improvements in both biological separations and MS. One of the more complicated protein complexes yet studied by MS is the cytosolic ribosome complex. Efforts to define the protein composition (7, 8), modifications (9), and subunit interactions (10) of ribosomes generally have mirrored the development of biomolecular analysis techniques and experimental approaches for the study of noncovalent protein complexes.Ribosomes are the canonical example of ribonucleoprotein complexes in both prokaryot...
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