Native MS Analysis of Bacteriorhodopsin and an Empty Nanodisc by Orthogonal Acceleration Time-of-Flight, Orbitrap and Ion Cyclotron Resonance.

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY(2016)

引用 42|浏览33
暂无评分
摘要
Over the past two decades, orthogonal acceleration time-of-flight has been the de facto analyzer for solution and membrane-soluble protein native mass spectrometry (MS) studies; this however is gradually changing. Three MS instruments are compared, the QToF, Orbitrap, and the FT-ICR, to analyze, under native instrument and buffer conditions, the seven-transmembrane helical protein bacteriorhodopsin-octylglucoside micelle and the empty nanodisc (MSP1D1-Nd) using both MS and tandem-MS modes of operation. Bacteriorhodopsin can be released from the octylglucosidemicelle efficiently on all three instruments (MS-mode), producing a narrow charge state distribution (z = 8+ to 10+) by either increasing the source lens or collision cell (or HCD) voltages. A lower center-of-mass collision energy (0.20-0.41 eV) is required for optimal bacteriorhodopsin liberation on the FT-ICR, in comparison to the QToF and Orbitrap instruments (0.29-2.47 eV). The empty MSP1D1-Nd can be measured with relative ease on all three instruments, resulting in a highly complex spectrum of overlapping, polydisperse charge states. There is a measurable difference in MSP1D1-Nd charge state distribution (z = 15+ to 26+), average molecular weight (141.7 to 169.6 kDa), and phospholipid incorporation number (143 to 184) under low activation conditions. Utilizing tandem-MS, bacteriorhodopsin can be effectively liberated from the octylglucoside-micelle by collisional (QToF and FT-ICR) or continuous IRMPD activation (FT-ICR). MSP1D1-Nd spectral complexity can also be significantly reduced by tandem-MS (QToF and FT-ICR) followed by mild collisional or continuous IRMPD activation, resulting in a spectrum in which the charge state and phospholipid incorporation levels can easily be determined.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要