Abstract
This paper describes the results of a systematic investigation designed to assess the utility of surface-induced dissociation in the structural analysis of small peptides (500-1800u). A number of different peptides, ranging in mass and amino acid sequence, are fragmented by collision with a surface in a tandem mass spectrometer and the spectra are compared with data obtained by gasphase collisional activation. The surface-induced dissociation spectra provide ample sequence information for the peptides. Side-chain cleavage ions of type w, which are generally detected upon kiloelectronvolt collisions with gaseous targets but not upon electronvolt collisions with gaseous targets, are detected in the ion-surface collision experiments. A theoretical approach based on MNDO bond order calculations is suggested for the description of peptide fragmentation. This model, supplemented by ab initio calculations, serves as a complement to the experimental work described in the paper and explains (i) the easy cleavage of the amide bond, (ii) charge-remote backbone and side-chain cleavages, and (iii) the influence of intramolecular H-bonding. © 1993, American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
McCormack, A. L., Dongré, A. R., Wysocki, V. H., & Somogyi, A. (1993). Fragmentation of Protonated Peptides: Surface-Induced Dissociation in Conjunction with a Quantum Mechanical Approach. Analytical Chemistry, 65(20), 2859–2872. https://doi.org/10.1021/ac00068a024
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