Chain Ejection Model for Electrospray Ionization of
Unfolded Proteins: Evidence from Atomistic Simulations and Ion Mobility
Spectrometry
Posted on 2018-07-24 - 00:00
The
ion evaporation model (IEM) and the charged residue model (CRM)
represent cornerstones of any discussion related to the mechanism
of electrospray ionization (ESI). Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations
have confirmed that small ions such as Na+ are ejected
from the surface of aqueous ESI droplets (IEM), while folded proteins
in native ESI are released by water evaporation to dryness (CRM).
ESI of unfolded proteins yields [M + zH]z+ ions that are much more highly charged than their
folded counterparts. A chain ejection model (CEM) has been proposed
to account for the protein ESI behavior under such non-native conditions
(Konermann, L., et al. Anal. Chem. 2013, 85, 2–9). The CEM envisions that unfolded
proteins are driven to the droplet surface by hydrophobic and electrostatic
factors, followed by gradual ejection via intermediates where droplets
carry extended protein tails. Thus far, it has not been possible to
support the CEM through MD simulations using realistic protein models
and atomistic force fields. Such endeavors require much larger droplets
than in previous MD studies. Also, the incorporation of CEM-related
H+ migration is difficult. This work overcomes these challenges
in MD simulations on unfolded apo-myoglobin (aMb) in droplets with
a 5.5 nm radius (∼22500 water molecules). We focused on solutions
at pH ∼4 where the aMb solution charge coincides with the charge
on some of the electrosprayed ions (22+ to 27+), such that H+ migration could be neglected. Na+ ions were added to
ensure a droplet charge close to the Rayleigh limit. We found that
16 of 17 MD runs on various protonation patterns produced [M + zH]z+ ions via chain ejection.
The predicted stretched-out aMb conformations were consistent with
experimental collision cross sections. These results support the view
that unfolded proteins follow the CEM. Overall, the IEM/CRM/CEM triad
can account for a wide range of ESI scenarios involving various types
of analytes.
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Metwally, Haidy; Duez, Quentin; Konermann, Lars (2018). Chain Ejection Model for Electrospray Ionization of
Unfolded Proteins: Evidence from Atomistic Simulations and Ion Mobility
Spectrometry. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.8b02926