Abstract

The 'effective' internal temperature of an 8.6 kDa ubiquitin cation was estimated under electron capture dissociation (ECD) conditions, in which a dispenser cathode electron source was mounted just outside an ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) cell, i.e., axially displaced at a distance less than 1 cm from the rear trap plate of the ICR cell. In this ECD configuration, thermal activation of the molecular ions stored in the ICR cell was anticipated since the heated dispenser cathode (T(cathode surface) > 1000 degrees C) emitted a large amount of (both visible and infrared) radiation as well as electrons. An evaluation of the internal temperature of ubiquitin 6+ and 7+ cations was made by comparing our ECD fragmentation patterns with those obtained by McLafferty et al. (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002; 124: 6407) as a function of the ion temperature. In McLafferty's configuration, the heating (or thermal activation) effect of their filament source was minimal since the filament was displaced by a distance as far as 70 cm from their ICR cell. A careful comparison reveals that the fragmentation patterns obtained in this work are very similar to those previously measured at T approximately 125 degrees C. In terms of sequence coverage, our ECD configuration provides better results, and in particular without the aid of any other simultaneous activation method, such as thermal heating, infrared multiphoton irradiation, or collisional activation, except for the visible and infrared radiation from the heated cathode.

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