4.8 Article

Sequence-Scrambling Fragmentation Pathways of Protonated Peptides

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 130, Issue 52, Pages 17774-17789

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja805074d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSERC Canada
  2. DFG [SU 244/3-1]
  3. U.S. National Science Foundation [CAREER-0239800]
  4. Kansas NSF-EPSCoR Program
  5. Wichita State University
  6. German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
  7. Landesstiftung Baden-Wurttemberg [P-CS-Prot/57]

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The gas-phase structures and fragmentation pathways of the N-terminal b and a fragments of YAGFL-NH2, AGLFY-NH2, GFLYA-NH2, FLYAG-NH2, and LYAGF-NH2 were investigated using collision-induced dissociation (CID) and detailed molecular mechanics and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Our combined experimental and theoretical approach allows probing of the scrambling and rearrangement reactions that take place in CID of b and a ions. It is shown that low-energy CID of the b(5) fragments of the above peptides produces nearly the same dissociation patterns. Furthermore, CID of protonated cyc/o-(YAGFL) generates the same fragments with nearly identical ion abundances when similar experimental conditions are applied. This suggests that rapid cyclization of the primarily linear b(5) ions takes place and that the CID spectrum is indeed determined by the fragmentation behavior of the cyclic isomer. This can open up at various amide bonds, and its fragmentation behavior can be understood only by assuming a multitude of fragmenting linear structures. Our computational results fully support this cyclization-reopening mechanism by showing that protonated cyclo-(YAGFL) is energetically favored over the linear b(5) isomers. Furthermore, the cyclization-reopening transition structures are energetically less demanding than those of conventional bond-breaking reactions, allowing fast interconversion among the cyclic and linear isomers. This chemistry can lead in principle to complete loss of sequence information upon CID, as documented for the b(5) ion of FLYAG-NH2. CID of the a(5) ions of the above peptides produces fragment ion distributions that can be explained by assuming b-type scrambling of their parent population and a --> a*-type rearrangement pathways (Vachet, R. W.; Bishop, B. M.; Erickson, B. W.; Glish, G. L. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1997, 119, 5481). While a ions easily undergo cyclization, the resulting macrocycle predominantly reopens to regenerate the original linear structure. Computational data indicate that the a --> a*-type rearrangement pathways of the linear a isomers involve post-cleavage proton-bound dimer intermediates in which the fragments reassociate and the originally C-terminal fragment is transferred to the N-terminus.

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