4.4 Review

Recent developments and applications of electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry in proteomics

Journal

AMINO ACIDS
Volume 46, Issue 7, Pages 1625-1634

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00726-014-1726-y

Keywords

Electron transfer dissociation; Mass spectrometry; Phosphorylation; Glycosylation; Top-down proteomics

Funding

  1. FP7 MARIE CURIE-PIRSES-GA [269256]
  2. Romanian National Authority for Scientific Research (ANCS/UEFISCDI) [PN-II-ID-2011-0047, RU-TE-2011-0008, PN-II-PT-PCCA-2011-3.1-0187]
  3. European Social Fund [POSDRU 107/1.5/S/78702]

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Electron transfer dissociation (ETD) has been developed recently as an efficient ion fragmentation technique in mass spectrometry (MS), being presently considered a step forward in proteomics with real perspectives for improvement, upgrade and application. Available also on affordable ion trap mass spectrometers, ETD induces specific N-C alpha bond cleavages of the peptide backbone with the preservation of the post-translational modifications and generation of product ions that are diagnostic for the modification site(s). In addition, in the last few years ETD contributed significantly to the development of top-down approaches which enable tandem MS of intact protein ions. The present review, covering the last 5 years highlights concisely the major achievements and the current applications of ETD fragmentation technique in proteomics. An ample part of the review is dedicated to ETD contribution in the elucidation of the most common posttranslational modifications, such as phosphorylation and glycosylation. Further, a brief section is devoted to top-down by ETD method applied to intact proteins. As the last few years have witnessed a major expansion of the microfluidics systems, a few considerations on ETD in combination with chip-based nanoelectrospray (nanoESI) as a platform for high throughput top-down proteomics are also presented.

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