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Anal Chem ; 93(16): 6355-6362, 2021 04 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33844516

RESUMO

A major limitation of intact protein fragmentation is the lack of sequence coverage within proteins' interiors. We show that collisionally activated dissociation (CAD) produces extensive internal fragmentation within proteins' interiors that fill the existing gaps in sequence coverage, including disulfide loop regions that cannot be characterized using terminal fragments. A barrier to the adoption of internal fragments is the lack of methods for their generation and assignment. To provide these, we explore the effects of protein size, mass accuracy, internal fragment size, CAD activation energy, and data preprocessing upon the production and identification of internal fragments. We also identify and mitigate the major source of ambiguity in internal fragment identification, which we term "frameshift ambiguity." Such ambiguity results from sequences containing any "middle" portion surrounded by the same composition on both termini, which upon fragmentation can produce two internal fragments of identical mass, yet out of frame by one or more amino acids (e.g., TRAIT producing TRAI or RAIT). We show that such instances permit the a priori assignment of the middle sequence portion. This insight and our optimized methods permit the unambiguous assignment of greater than 97% of internal fragments using only the accurate mass. We show that any remaining ambiguity in internal fragment assignment can be removed by consideration of fragmentation propensities or by (pseudo)-MS3. Applying these methods resulted in a 10-fold and 43-fold expanded number of identified ions, and a concomitant 7- and 16-fold increase in fragmentation sites, respectively, for native and reduced forms of a disease-associated SOD1 variant.

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