1 research outputs found
Phosphoproteomics with Activated Ion Electron Transfer Dissociation
The
ability to localize phosphosites to specific amino acid residues
is crucial to translating phosphoproteomic data into biological meaningful
contexts. In a companion manuscript (Anal. Chem. 2017, DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b00213), we described a new implementation of activated ion
electron transfer dissociation (AI-ETD) on a quadrupole-Orbitrap-linear
ion trap hybrid MS system (Orbitrap Fusion Lumos), which greatly improved
peptide fragmentation and identification over ETD and other supplemental
activation methods. Here we present the performance of AI-ETD for
identifying and localizing sites of phosphorylation in both phosphopeptides
and intact phosphoproteins. Using 90 min analyses we show that AI-ETD
can identify 24,503 localized phosphopeptide spectral matches enriched
from mouse brain lysates, which more than triples identifications
from standard ETD experiments and outperforms ETcaD and EThcD as well.
AI-ETD achieves these gains through improved quality of fragmentation
and MS/MS success rates for all precursor charge states, especially
for doubly protonated species. We also evaluate the degree to which
phosphate neutral loss occurs from phosphopeptide product ions due
to the infrared photoactivation of AI-ETD and show that modifying
phosphoRS (a phosphosite localization algorithm) to include phosphate
neutral losses can significantly improve localization in AI-ETD spectra.
Finally, we demonstrate the utility of AI-ETD in localizing phosphosites
in α-casein, an ∼23.5 kDa phosphoprotein that showed
eight of nine known phosphorylation sites occupied upon intact mass
analysis. AI-ETD provided the greatest sequence coverage for all five
charge states investigated and was the only fragmentation method to
localize all eight phosphosites for each precursor. Overall, this
work highlights the analytical value AI-ETD can bring to both bottom-up
and top-down phosphoproteomics