Abstract

Protonated nitroarginine, [R(NO2) + H](+), which contains the nitroguanidine 'explosophore,' undergoes homolytic N - N nitro-imine bond cleavage to expel NO2(•) and form a radical cation of arginine in high yield (100% relative abundance) upon low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID). Other ionization states of nitroarginine, including [R(NO2) - H](-), and a fixed-charge derivative of nitroarginine do not expel NO2(•) (<1%), but instead dissociate via heterolytic bond cleavage with abundant losses of small molecules (N2O and H2N2O2) from the nitroguanidine group. The effects of proton mobility on the CID reactions of nitroarginine containing peptides was investigated for peptide derivatives of leucine enkephalin, including XYGGFLR(NO2), X = D, G, K, and R, by examining the different protonation states: [M - H](-); [M + H](+); and [M + 2H](2+). For [M + H](+) containing the less basic N-terminal residues (X = D, G) and all [M + 2H](2+), mobile proton fragmentation reactions that result in peptide sequence ions dominate. In contrast, for peptides containing the basic N-terminal residues (R and K), the CID spectra of both the [M - H](-) and [M + H](+) are dominated by the losses of small even-electron neutrals from the nitroarginine side-chain. The fraction of nitroguanidine directed fragmentation of the nitroarginine side chain that results in bond homolysis to form [XYGGFLR](+•) by expulsion of NO2(•) increases by more than 10 times as the protonation state changes from [M - H](-) (<10%) to [M + 2H](2+) (ca. 90%) and by about four times as the acidity of the [M + H](+) N-terminal residue increases from R (19.0%) to D (76.5%). These results indicate that protonated peptides containing nitroarginine can undergo non-canonical mobile proton triggered radical fragmentation.

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