posted on 2020-02-10, 23:29authored byJared
O. Kafader, Kenneth R. Durbin, Rafael D. Melani, Benjamin J. Des Soye, Luis F. Schachner, Michael W. Senko, Philip D. Compton, Neil L. Kelleher
Charge
detection mass spectrometry (CDMS) is mainly utilized to
determine the mass of intact molecules. Previous applications of CDMS
have determined the mass-to-charge ratio and the charge of large polymers,
DNA molecules, and native protein complexes, from which corresponding
mass values could be assigned. Recent advances have demonstrated that
CDMS using an Orbitrap mass analyzer yields the reliable assignment
of integer charge states that enables individual ion mass spectrometry
(I2MS) and spectral output directly into the mass domain.
Here I2MS analysis was extended to isotopically resolved
fragment ions from intact proteoforms for the first time. With a radically
different bias for ion readout, I2MS identified low-abundance
fragment ions containing many hundreds of residues that were undetectable
by standard Orbitrap measurements, leading to a doubling in the sequence
coverage of triosephosphate isomerase. Thus MS/MS with the detection
of individual ions (MS/I2MS) provides a far greater ability
to detect high mass fragment ions and exhibits strong complementarity
to traditional spectral readout in this, its first application to
top-down mass spectrometry.