4.4 Article

Quadrupole time-of-flight versus triple-quadrupole mass spectrometry for the determination of phosphopeptides by precursor ion scanning

Journal

JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 36, Issue 7, Pages 782-790

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jms.174

Keywords

Q(2)-pulsing; phosphotyrosine immonium ion; nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry; precursor ion scanning

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An API 3000 triple-quadrupole instrument and a QSTAR Pulsar quadrupole time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer were compared for the determination of phosphopeptides by precursor ion scanning in both the positive and negative nanoelectrospray ionization modes. The limits of detection for synthetic phosphopeptides were similar (500 amol mul(-1)) for both types of instruments when monitoring precursors of -79 Da (PO3-). However, the quadrupole TOF system was approximately fivefold more sensitive (1 fmol mul(-1)) than the triple-quadrupole instrument (5 fmol mul(-1)) when monitoring precursors of 216 Da (immonium ion of phosphotyrosine). The recently introduced Q(2)-pulsing function, which enhances the transmission of fragment ions of a selected m/z window from the collision cell into the TOF part, improved the sensitivity of precursor ion scans on a quadrupole TOF instrument. The selectivity of precursor ion scans is much better on quadrupole TOF systems than on triple quadrupoles because the high resolving power of the reflectron-TOF mass analyzer permits high-accuracy fragment ion selection at no expense of sensitivity. This minimizes interferences from other peptide fragment ions (a-, b-, and y- type) of the same nominal mass but with sufficient differences in their exact masses. As a result, the characteristic immonium ion of phosphotyrosine at m/z 216.043 can be utilized for the selective detection of tyrosine phosphorylated peptides. Our data suggest that, in addition to their superior performance for peptide sequencing, quadrupole TOF instruments also offer a very viable alternative to triple quadrupoles for precursor ion scanning, thus combining high sensitivity and selectivity for both MS and MS/MS experiments in one instrument. Copyright (C) 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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