Abstract

Positive ion mode matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) was used to explore nonspecific interactions between proteins and oligonucleotides. The formation of noncovalent complexes showed correlation with the type of oligonucleotide bases and with the amino acid composition of the proteins. Among the four DNA homooligomers, abundant protein-nucleic acid complexes were detected for pd(T)n, whereas negligible attachment was evident for pd(A)n, pd(C)n, and pd(G)n. Mixed base sequence nucleic acids (pd(AGCTCAGCTT) and d(TTAGCAGCTT) also showed affinity to Arg-Lys. The protein affinity of pd(T)n turned out to be nonspecific and produced a larger variety of complexes when the number of basic residues in the protein was increased. Complexation of pd(T)n with small basic dipeptides (Arg-Lys or His-His) led to significant improvement in the mass resolution for positive ions. For example, the mass resolution of the pd(T)20/Arg-Lys complex exhibited about 4 times improvement over pd(T)20 alone. The protein--oligonucleotide interactions were also pH and matrix dependent. Lowering the pH from its original value (pH = 1.7) led to diminishing complex related signal, whereas increasing the pH resulted in the appearance of a larger variety of complexes. 2,5-Dihydroxybenzoic acid matrix demonstrated much greater tendency to produce complex ions than did the three other matrix materials we tested. A possible explanation of the observed phenomena was based on pH-controlled ion pair formation between oligonucleotides and proteins.

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