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Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase

[Image: see text] Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) are of great biophysical and clinical interest because of the key role they play in many cellular processes. Here, a comprehensive top down study of 152 IMPs and 277 soluble proteins from human H1299 cells including 11 087 fragments obtained from c...

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Autores principales: Skinner, Owen S., Catherman, Adam D., Early, Bryan P., Thomas, Paul M., Compton, Philip D., Kelleher, Neil L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4018139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24689519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac500864w
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author Skinner, Owen S.
Catherman, Adam D.
Early, Bryan P.
Thomas, Paul M.
Compton, Philip D.
Kelleher, Neil L.
author_facet Skinner, Owen S.
Catherman, Adam D.
Early, Bryan P.
Thomas, Paul M.
Compton, Philip D.
Kelleher, Neil L.
author_sort Skinner, Owen S.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) are of great biophysical and clinical interest because of the key role they play in many cellular processes. Here, a comprehensive top down study of 152 IMPs and 277 soluble proteins from human H1299 cells including 11 087 fragments obtained from collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), 6452 from higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD), and 2981 from electron transfer dissociation (ETD) shows their great utility and complementarity for the identification and characterization of IMPs. A central finding is that ETD is ∼2-fold more likely to cleave in soluble regions than threshold fragmentation methods, whereas the reverse is observed in transmembrane domains with an observed ∼4-fold bias toward CAD and HCD. The location of charges just prior to dissociation is consistent with this directed fragmentation: protons remain localized on basic residues during ETD but easily mobilize along the backbone during collisional activation. The fragmentation driven by these protons, which is most often observed in transmembrane domains, both is of higher yield and occurs over a greater number of backbone cleavage sites. Further, while threshold dissociation events in transmembrane domains are on average 10.1 (CAD) and 9.2 (HCD) residues distant from the nearest charge site (R, K, H, N-terminus), fragmentation is strongly influenced by the N- or C-terminal position relative to that site: the ratio of observed b- to y-fragments is ∼1:3 if the cleavage occurs >7 residues N-terminal and ∼3:1 if it occurs >7 residues C-terminal to the nearest basic site. Threshold dissociation products driven by a mobilized proton appear to be strongly dependent on not only relative position of a charge site but also N- or C-terminal directionality of proton movement.
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spelling pubmed-40181392015-04-01 Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase Skinner, Owen S. Catherman, Adam D. Early, Bryan P. Thomas, Paul M. Compton, Philip D. Kelleher, Neil L. Anal Chem [Image: see text] Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) are of great biophysical and clinical interest because of the key role they play in many cellular processes. Here, a comprehensive top down study of 152 IMPs and 277 soluble proteins from human H1299 cells including 11 087 fragments obtained from collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), 6452 from higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD), and 2981 from electron transfer dissociation (ETD) shows their great utility and complementarity for the identification and characterization of IMPs. A central finding is that ETD is ∼2-fold more likely to cleave in soluble regions than threshold fragmentation methods, whereas the reverse is observed in transmembrane domains with an observed ∼4-fold bias toward CAD and HCD. The location of charges just prior to dissociation is consistent with this directed fragmentation: protons remain localized on basic residues during ETD but easily mobilize along the backbone during collisional activation. The fragmentation driven by these protons, which is most often observed in transmembrane domains, both is of higher yield and occurs over a greater number of backbone cleavage sites. Further, while threshold dissociation events in transmembrane domains are on average 10.1 (CAD) and 9.2 (HCD) residues distant from the nearest charge site (R, K, H, N-terminus), fragmentation is strongly influenced by the N- or C-terminal position relative to that site: the ratio of observed b- to y-fragments is ∼1:3 if the cleavage occurs >7 residues N-terminal and ∼3:1 if it occurs >7 residues C-terminal to the nearest basic site. Threshold dissociation products driven by a mobilized proton appear to be strongly dependent on not only relative position of a charge site but also N- or C-terminal directionality of proton movement. American Chemical Society 2014-04-01 2014-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4018139/ /pubmed/24689519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac500864w Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
spellingShingle Skinner, Owen S.
Catherman, Adam D.
Early, Bryan P.
Thomas, Paul M.
Compton, Philip D.
Kelleher, Neil L.
Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title_full Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title_fullStr Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title_full_unstemmed Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title_short Fragmentation of Integral Membrane Proteins in the Gas Phase
title_sort fragmentation of integral membrane proteins in the gas phase
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4018139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24689519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac500864w
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