Abstract

Cysteine (Cys) is prone to diverse post-translational modifications in proteins, including oxidation into sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH) by reactive oxygen species generated under oxidative stress. Detection of low-concentration and metastable Cys-SOH within complex biological matrices is challenging due to the dynamic concentration range of proteins in the samples. Herein, visible laser-induced dissociation (LID) implemented in a mass spectrometer was used for streamlining the detection of Cys oxidized proteins owing to proper derivatization of Cys-SOH with a chromophore tag functionalized with a cyclohexanedione group. Once grafted, peptides undergo a high fragmentation yield under LID, leading concomitantly to informative backbone ions and to a chromophore reporter ion. Seventy-nine percent of the Cys-containing tryptic peptides derived from human serum albumin and serotransferrin tracked by parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) were detected as targets subjected to oxidation. These candidates as well as Cys-containing peptides predicted by in silico trypsin digestion of five other human plasma proteins were then tracked in real plasma samples to pinpoint the endogenous Cys-SOH subpopulation. Most of the targeted peptides were detected in all plasma samples by LID-PRM, with significant differences in their relative amounts. By eliminating the signal of interfering co-eluted compounds, LID-PRM surpasses conventional HCD (higher-energy collisional dissociation)-PRM in detecting grafted Cys-SOH-containing peptides and allows now to foresee clinical applications in large human cohorts.

Full Text
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