4.5 Article

N-Acylated Dipeptide Tags Enable Precise Measurement of Ion Temperature in Peptide Fragmentation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 116, Issue 48, Pages 13982-13990

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp308697v

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Brain Korea 21 program
  2. Functional Proteomics Center [FPR08A1-040]
  3. National Research Foundation [2009-0086218]
  4. MEST
  5. National Research Foundation of Korea [2009-0086218] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Peptide fragmentations into b- and y-type ions are useful for the identification of proteins. The b ion, having the structure of a N-protonated oxazolone, dissociates to the a-type ion with loss of CO. This CO-loss process affords the possibility of characterizing the temperature of the b ion. Herein, we used N-acylated dipeptide tags, isobaric tags originally developed for protein quantification, as internal standards for the measurement of the ion temperature in peptide fragmentation. Amine-reactive dipeptide tags were attached to the N-termini of sample peptides. Collision-induced dissociation (CID) of the tagged peptides yielded a b-type quantitation signal (b(S)) from the tag, which subsequently dissociated into the as ion with CO-loss. As the length of alkyl side chain on the dipeptide tag was extended from C-1 to C-8, the yield of a(S) ion gradually increased for the 4-alkyl-substituted oxazolone ion but decreased for the 2-alkyl-substituted one. To gain insights into the unimolecular dissociation kinetics, we obtained the potential energy surface from ab initio calculations. Theoretical study suggested that the 4-alkyl substitution on N-protonated oxazolone decreased the enthalpy of activation by stabilizing the productlike transition state, whereas the 2-alkyl substitution increased it by stabilizing the reactant. Resulting potential energy surfaces were used to calculate the microcanonical and canonical rate constants as well as the a(S)-ion yield. Arrhenius plots of canonical rate constants provided activation energies and pre-exponential factors for the CO-loss processes in the 600-800 K range. Comparison of experimental a(S)-ion yields with theoretical values led to precise determination of the temperature of b(S) ion. Thus, the b(S)-ion temperature of tagged peptide can be measured simply by combining kinetic parameters provided here and a(S)-ion yields obtained experimentally. Although the b-type fragment patterns varied with the chain length and position of alkyl substituent on the N-protonated oxazolone, the y-type fragment patterns were almost identical under these conditions. Furthermore, b(S)-ion temperatures were nearly the same with only a few degrees K difference. Our results demonstrate a novel use of N-acylated dipeptide tags as internal temperature standards, which enables the reproducible acquisition of peptide fragment spectra,

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