Three dissociation methods, including collision-induced dissociation (CID), electron capture dissociation (ECD), and electronic excitation dissociation (EED), were systematically compared for structural characterization of doubly charged glycopeptide. CID produced distinctively different tandem mass spectra for glycopeptide adducted with different charge carriers. Protonated species produced mainly glycosidic cleavages in high abundance. CID of magnesiated glycopeptide formed more cross-ring cleavages, whereas doubly sodiated species produced cleavages at both glycan and peptide moieties. The effect of charge carriers on the fragmentation in ECD and EED was lower than that in CID. ECD produced mainly peptide backbone cleavages but limited cleavages at the glycan moiety, whereas EED of glycopeptide resulted in extensive fragmentation throughout the molecular ion regardless of the charge carriers. Magnesiated species gave, however, more cross-ring cleavages than other charge carriers did. These results demonstrated that EED of magnesiated species could be used as a one-step dissociation method for comprehensive structural analysis of glycopeptides.
Reproducible peptide oxidation was observed using a homebuilt liquid microjunction-surface sampling probe (LMJ-SSP) platform for analyzing peptide standards. Although electrochemical oxidation and corona discharges have previously been associated with analyte oxidation in electrospray ionization (ESI) and ESI-related ambient ionization mass spectrometry (MS) methods, they were unlikely the causes for the peptide oxidation observed in the LMJ-SSP studies. A systematic investigation demonstrated that analyte oxidation was induced during the droplet drying on a solid surface through liquid–solid electrification processes. To minimize unwanted analyte oxidation, the water content in the sample solution should be decreased and the use of hydroxyl-functionalized substrates, such as glass slides, should be avoided. In addition, if water is an essential solvent component, adding an antioxidant, such as ascorbic acid, to the sample solution before droplet evaporation on the solid surface could lower the percentage of analyte oxidation. The present findings apply to all the MS methods that involve drying microliters of sample solution onto a suitable substrate in their sample preparation protocols.
Rationale Dissociation of biomolecules by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) generates a variety of fragment ions which provide useful information for the structural characterization of biomolecules. Different fragmentation strategies result in different mass spectra for the same molecule and thus provide distinct features. Charge carriers play important roles in determining the dissociation pathways of the target precursor ions. The use of various transition metals ions as charge carriers of glycopeptide and glycan might provide additional structural information and needs to be investigated. Methods A 9.4 T SolariX FTICR mass spectrometer was used for collision‐induced dissociation (CID) of glycopeptide and glycan. Group IIB metal ions, including Zn2+, Cd2+ and Hg2+, were used as charge carriers. Glycopeptide NLTK‐M5G2 and glycan G1F were used as the model systems. Results For Zn2+‐ and Cd2+‐adducted species, cross‐ring cleavages, glycosidic cleavages and cleavages along the peptide backbone could be obtained. There is a high degree of similarity in their CID spectra with that of Mg2+ ion‐adducted glycopeptide species. For Hg2+‐adducted species, only glycosidic cleavages were observed in high abundance. The formation of doubly‐charged ions (M2+) and a series of [f−H]+ fragments indicated unique dissociation pathways for Hg2+‐adducted glycopeptide. Conclusions Zn2+ and Cd2+‐adducted glycopeptide species produced similar dissociation CID spectra, whereas Hg2+‐adducted species produced significantly different CID spectra. Similar CID dissociation features were also observed for Group IIB metal ions adducted glycan species. These results demonstrated that different metal ions might be used to tune the dissociation behaviors of glycopeptides and glycans.
A performance enhanced CaptiveSpray differential ion mobility device was designed and constructed by incorporating a circular channel and a gas flow homogenizing channel (GFHC) between the CaptiveSpray ion source and planar differential ion mobility spectrometry (DMS). The GFHC was used to reduce gas flow heterogeneity prior to the entrance of the DMS device. The optimal flared entrance greatly reduces gas flow velocity at the inlet region owing to its relatively large gas inlet interface, which assists in reducing disparities between the minimum and maximum gas velocity along the x-axis. The circular electrode was machined with channels along the x-and y-axis for the passage of auxiliary gas and was applied with a potential to focus the incoming ions from the CaptiveSpray source into the DMS channel. Using reserpine as a reference standard, substantial signal enhancement was achieved with a concomitant reduction of the peak width in the ionogram.
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