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Subsecond Time-Resolved Mass Spectrometry in Dynamic Structural Biology

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 122, Issue 8, Pages 7624-7646

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.1c00222

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Life at the molecular level is a dynamic world, and subsecond time-resolved mass spectrometry provides a unique window into the dynamic behavior of biological macromolecules. This technique has made important contributions to understanding the functional and pathological processes of biomolecules.
Life at the molecular level is a dynamic world, where the key players-proteins, oligonucleotides, lipids, and carbohydrates-are in a perpetual state of structural flux, shifting rapidly between local minima on their conformational free energy landscapes. The techniques of classical structural biology, X-ray crystallography, structural NMR, and cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), while capable of extraordinary structural resolution, are innately illsuited to characterize biomolecules in their dynamically active states. Subsecond time-resolved mass spectrometry (MS) provides a unique window into the dynamic world of biological macromolecules, offering the capacity to directly monitor biochemical processes and conformational shifts with a structural dimension provided by the electrospray charge-state distribution, ion mobility, covalent labeling, or hydrogen-deuterium exchange. Over the past two decades, this suite of techniques has provided important insights into the inherently dynamic processes that drive function and pathogenesis in biological macromolecules, including (mis)folding, complexation, aggregation, ligand binding, and enzyme catalysis, among others. This Review provides a comprehensive account of subsecond time-resolved MS and the advances it has enabled in dynamic structural biology, with an emphasis on insights into the dynamic drivers of protein function.

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