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Discrimination of Isoleucine and Leucine by Dimethylation-Assisted MS3.

Sheila Maibom-ThomsenSøren HeisselEjvind MørtzPeter HojrupJakob Bunkenborg
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
Protein sequencing by mass spectrometry has transformed the field of biopharmaceutical analysis, but a missing part in the analytical toolkit is the ability to distinguish between the isomeric residues isoleucine and leucine because it is a requisite for efficient analysis of the primary structure of proteins. To address this need, we have developed a novel mass spectrometric method that combines reductive dimethylation and MS3 fragmentation with LCMS peptide mapping. The dimethylation of peptide N-termini leads to intense a1-ions upon collision-induced fragmentation, and further fragmentation of the isoleucine/leucine a1-ion leads to informative spectra with fragments that can discriminate between the two isomers. The methodology of a1-directed MS3 was applied to two antibodies in combination with the proteases trypsin, thermolysin, chymotrypsin, and pepsin to generate peptides exposing N-terminal I/L residues.
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