Abstract

A method for improved sequence coverage in C-terminal sequencing of peptides, based on carboxypeptidase digestion, is described. In conventional carboxypeptidase digestions, the peptide substrate is usually extensively degraded and a full amino acid sequence cannot be obtained due to the lack of a complete peptide ladder. In the presented method, a protecting group is introduced at the C terminus of a fraction of the peptide fragments formed in the digest, and thereby further degradation of the C-terminally modified peptides are slowed down. The protecting group was attached to the C-terminal amino acid through a carboxypeptidase-catalyzed reaction with an alternative nucleophile, 2-pyridylmethylamine, added to the aqueous digestion buffer. Six peptides were digested by carboxypeptidase Y with and without 2-pyridylmethylamine present in the digest buffer, and the resulting fragments subsequently were analyzed with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI–MS). Comparison of the two digestion methods showed that the probability of successful ladder sequencing increased, by more than 50% using 2-pyridylmethylamine as a competing nucleophile in carboxypeptidase Y digests.

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