Login / Signup

Backbone Cleavages of Protonated Peptoids upon Collision-Induced Dissociation: Competitive and Consecutive B-Y and A1-YX Reactions.

Emilie HalinSébastien HoyasVincent LemaurJulien De WinterSophie LaurentMichael D ConnollyRonald N ZuckermannJérôme CornilPascal Gerbaux
Published in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2019)
Mass spectrometric techniques and more particularly collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments represent a powerful method for the determination of the primary sequence of (bio)molecules. However, the knowledge of the ion fragmentation patterns say the dissociation reaction mechanisms is a prerequisite to reconstitute the sequence based on fragment ions. Previous papers proposed that protonated peptoids dissociate following an oxazolone-ring mechanism starting from the O-protonation species and leading to high mass Y sequence ions. Here we revisit this backbone cleavage mechanism by performing CID and ion mobility experiments, together with computational chemistry, on tailor-made peptoids. We demonstrated that the B/Y cleavages of collisionally activated O-protonated peptoids must involve the amide nitrogen protonated structures as the dissociating species, mimicking the CID behavior of protonated peptides. Upon the nucleophilic attack of the oxygen atom of the N-terminal adjacent carbonyl group on the carbonyl carbon atom of the protonated amide, the peptoid ions directly dissociate to form an ion-neutral complex associating an oxazolone ion to the neutral truncated peptoid residue. Dissociation of the ion/neutral complex predominantly produces Y ions due to the high proton affinity of the secondary amide function characteristic of truncated peptoids. Whereas the production of Yx ions from acetylated peptoids also involves the B/Y pathway, the observation of abundant Yx ions from non-acetylated peptoid ions is shown in the present study to arise from an A1-Yx mechanism. The consecutive and competitive characters of the A1-Yx and the B/Y mechanisms are also investigated by drift time-aligned CID experiments.
Keyphrases