4.8 Article

Electrothermal Supercharging in Mass Spectrometry and Tandem Mass Spectrometry of Native Proteins

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages 138-146

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac302256d

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM096097]
  2. National Science Foundation [DGE1106400]

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Electrothermal supercharging of protein ions formed by electrospray ionization from buffered aqueous solutions results in significant increases to both the maximum and average charge states compared to native mass spectrometry in which ions are formed from the same solutions but with lower spray potentials. For eight of the nine proteins investigated, the maximum charge states of protonated ions formed from native solutions with electrothermal supercharging is greater than those obtained from conventional denaturing solutions consisting of water/methanol/acid, although the average charging is slightly lower owing to contributions of small populations of more folded low charge-state structures. Under these conditions, electrothermal supercharging is slightly less effective for anions than for cations. Equivalent sequence coverage (80%) is obtained with electron transfer dissociation of the same high charge-state ion of cytochrome c formed by electrothermal supercharging from native solutions and from denaturing solutions. Electrothermal supercharging should be advantageous for combining structural studies of proteins in native environments with mass spectrometers that have limited high m/z capabilities and for significantly improving tandem mass spectrometry performance for protein ions formed from solutions in which the molecules have native structures and activities.

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