Selection of Collision
Energies in Proteomics Mass
Spectrometry Experiments for Best Peptide Identification: Study of
Mascot Score Energy Dependence Reveals Double Optimum
posted on 2018-04-02, 00:00authored byÁgnes Révész, Tibor András Rokob, Dany Jeanne Dit Fouque, Lilla Turiák, Antony Memboeuf, Károly Vékey, László Drahos
Collision energy is a key parameter
determining the information
content of beam-type collision induced dissociation tandem mass spectrometry
(MS/MS) spectra, and its optimal choice largely affects successful
peptide and protein identification in MS-based proteomics. For an
MS/MS spectrum, quality of peptide match based on sequence database
search, often characterized in terms of a single score, is a complex
function of spectrum characteristics, and its collision energy dependence
has remained largely unexplored. We carried out electrospray ionization-quadrupole-time
of flight (ESI-Q-TOF)-MS/MS measurements on 2807 peptides from tryptic
digests of HeLa and E. coli at 21 different collision
energies. Agglomerative clustering of the resulting Mascot score versus
energy curves revealed that only few of them display a single, well-defined
maximum; rather, they feature either a broad plateau or two clear
peaks. Nonlinear least-squares fitting of one or two Gaussian functions
allowed the characteristic energies to be determined. We found that
the double peaks and the plateaus in Mascot score can be associated
with the different energy dependence of b- and y-type fragment ion intensities. We determined that the
energies for optimum Mascot scores follow separate linear trends for
the unimodal and bimodal cases with rather large residual variance
even after differences in proton mobility are taken into account.
This leaves room for experiment optimization and points to the possible
influence of further factors beyond m/z.