Abstract

Injected-ion mobility and high-pressure ion mobility techniques have been used to examine the conformations of bradykinin, insulin chain A, and several other peptide ions in the gas phase. Under the experimental conditions employed, evidence for multimer formation in the mass spectra of peptides is minimal or absent altogether. However, ion mobility distributions show that aggregates of peptides (containing a single charge per monomer unit) are observed at the same mass-to-charge ratios as the singly charged parent ions. Collision cross sections for these clusters show that they have tightly packed roughly spherical conformations. We have bracketed the average density as 0.87 < ρ < 1.00 g cm −3. In some cases, specific stable aggregate forms within a cluster size can be distinguished indicating that some high order structures are favored in the gas phase. Multimer formation between different sizes of polyalanine peptides shows no evidence for size specificity in aggregate formation. Collisional and thermal excitation studies have been used to examine structural transitions and dissociation of the multimers. Aggregates appear to dissociate via loss of singly charged monomers. The observation that peptide multimers can be concealed in mass spectral data requires that fragmentation patterns and reactivity studies of singly charged monomers be undertaken with care.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call