Abstract

In this paper, we compare ionization and dissociation of a series of singly and doubly protonated peptides, namely leucine enkephalin, bradykinin, LHRH and substance P as induced by collisions with keV H +, He + and He 2+. For all peptides under study, the fragmentation pattern depends strongly on the electronic structure of the projectile ions. Immonium ions, side-chains and their fragments dominate the spectrum whereas fragments due to peptide backbone cleavage are weak or even almost absent for He +. Here, resonant electron capture from the peptide is ruled out and only interaction channels accompanied by much higher excitation contribute. Cleavage of the side-chain linkage appears to be a process alternative to backbone fragmentation occurring after internal vibrational redistribution of excitation energy. Depending on the peptide, this process can lead to the loss of a side-chain cation (leucine enkephalin, LHRH) or a neutral side-chain (substance P).

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