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Multiplatform High-Definition Ion Mobility Separations of the Largest Epimeric Peptides.

Hayden A ThurmanGayani WijegunawardenaFrancis BerthiasDavid L WilliamsonHaifan WuGabe NagyOle Nørregaard JensenAlexandre A Shvartsburg
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) coupled to mass spectrometry (MS) has become a versatile tool to fractionate complex mixtures, distinguish structural isomers, and elucidate molecular geometries. Along with the whole MS field, IMS/MS advances to ever larger species. A topical proteomic problem is the discovery and characterization of d-amino acid-containing peptides (DAACPs) that are critical to neurotransmission and toxicology. Both linear IMS and FAIMS previously disentangled d/l epimers with up to ∼30 residues. In the first study using all three most powerful IMS methodologies─trapped IMS, cyclic IMS, and FAIMS─we demonstrate baseline resolution of the largest known d/l peptides (CHH from Homarus americanus with 72 residues) with a dynamic range up to 100. This expands FAIMS analyses of isomeric modified peptides, especially using hydrogen-rich buffers, to the ∼50-100 residue range of small proteins. The spectra for d and l are unprecedentedly strikingly similar except for a uniform shift of the separation parameter, indicating the conserved epimer-specific structural elements across multiple charge states and conformers. As the interepimer resolution tracks the average for smaller DAACPs, the IMS approaches could help search for yet larger DAACPs. The a priori method to calibrate cyclic (including multipass) IMS developed here may be broadly useful.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • amino acid
  • multiple sclerosis
  • liquid chromatography
  • ms ms
  • single molecule
  • gas chromatography
  • small molecule
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • genetic diversity