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Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer

[Image: see text] Ultraviolet photodissociation is a fast, photon-mediated fragmentation method that yields high sequence coverage and informative cleavages of biomolecules. In this work, 193 nm UVPD was coupled with a 12 Tesla FT-ICR mass spectrometer and 10.6 μm infrared multi-photon dissociation...

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Autores principales: Theisen, Alina, Wootton, Christopher A., Haris, Anisha, Morgan, Tomos E., Lam, Yuko P. Y., Barrow, Mark P., O’Connor, Peter B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9670024/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36317856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02354
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author Theisen, Alina
Wootton, Christopher A.
Haris, Anisha
Morgan, Tomos E.
Lam, Yuko P. Y.
Barrow, Mark P.
O’Connor, Peter B.
author_facet Theisen, Alina
Wootton, Christopher A.
Haris, Anisha
Morgan, Tomos E.
Lam, Yuko P. Y.
Barrow, Mark P.
O’Connor, Peter B.
author_sort Theisen, Alina
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Ultraviolet photodissociation is a fast, photon-mediated fragmentation method that yields high sequence coverage and informative cleavages of biomolecules. In this work, 193 nm UVPD was coupled with a 12 Tesla FT-ICR mass spectrometer and 10.6 μm infrared multi-photon dissociation to provide gentle slow-heating of UV-irradiated ions. No internal instrument hardware modifications were required. Adjusting the timing of laser pulses to the ion motion within the ICR cell provided consistent fragmentation yield shot-to-shot and may also be used to monitor ion positions within the ICR cell. Single-pulse UVPD of the native-like 5+ charge state of ubiquitin resulted in 86.6% cleavage coverage. Additionally, IR activation post UVPD doubled the overall fragmentation yield and boosted the intensity of UVPD-specific x-type fragments up to 4-fold. This increased yield effect was also observed for the 6+ charge state of ubiquitin, albeit less pronounced. This indicates that gentle slow-heating serves to sever tethered fragments originating from non-covalently linked compact structures and makes activation post UVPD an attractive option to boost fragmentation efficiency for top-down studies. Lastly, UVPD was implemented and optimized as a fragmentation method for 2DMS, a data-independent acquisition method. UVPD-2DMS was demonstrated to be a viable method using BSA digest peptides as a model system.
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spelling pubmed-96700242022-11-18 Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer Theisen, Alina Wootton, Christopher A. Haris, Anisha Morgan, Tomos E. Lam, Yuko P. Y. Barrow, Mark P. O’Connor, Peter B. Anal Chem [Image: see text] Ultraviolet photodissociation is a fast, photon-mediated fragmentation method that yields high sequence coverage and informative cleavages of biomolecules. In this work, 193 nm UVPD was coupled with a 12 Tesla FT-ICR mass spectrometer and 10.6 μm infrared multi-photon dissociation to provide gentle slow-heating of UV-irradiated ions. No internal instrument hardware modifications were required. Adjusting the timing of laser pulses to the ion motion within the ICR cell provided consistent fragmentation yield shot-to-shot and may also be used to monitor ion positions within the ICR cell. Single-pulse UVPD of the native-like 5+ charge state of ubiquitin resulted in 86.6% cleavage coverage. Additionally, IR activation post UVPD doubled the overall fragmentation yield and boosted the intensity of UVPD-specific x-type fragments up to 4-fold. This increased yield effect was also observed for the 6+ charge state of ubiquitin, albeit less pronounced. This indicates that gentle slow-heating serves to sever tethered fragments originating from non-covalently linked compact structures and makes activation post UVPD an attractive option to boost fragmentation efficiency for top-down studies. Lastly, UVPD was implemented and optimized as a fragmentation method for 2DMS, a data-independent acquisition method. UVPD-2DMS was demonstrated to be a viable method using BSA digest peptides as a model system. American Chemical Society 2022-11-01 2022-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9670024/ /pubmed/36317856 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02354 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Theisen, Alina
Wootton, Christopher A.
Haris, Anisha
Morgan, Tomos E.
Lam, Yuko P. Y.
Barrow, Mark P.
O’Connor, Peter B.
Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title_full Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title_fullStr Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title_short Enhancing Biomolecule Analysis and 2DMS Experiments by Implementation of (Activated Ion) 193 nm UVPD on a FT-ICR Mass Spectrometer
title_sort enhancing biomolecule analysis and 2dms experiments by implementation of (activated ion) 193 nm uvpd on a ft-icr mass spectrometer
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9670024/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36317856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02354
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