Effects of Polarity on the Structures and Charge States
of Native-Like Proteins and Protein Complexes in the Gas Phase
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Abstract
Native
mass spectrometry and ion mobility spectrometry were used to investigate
the gas-phase structures of selected cations and anions of proteins
and protein complexes with masses ranging from 6 to 468 kDa. Under
the same solution conditions, the average charge states observed for
all native-like anions were less than those for the corresponding
cations. Using an rf-confining drift cell, similar collision cross
sections were measured in positive and negative ion mode suggesting
that anions and cations have very similar structures. This result
suggests that for protein and protein complex ions within this mass
range, there is no inherent benefit to selecting a specific polarity
for capturing a more native-like structure. For peptides and low-mass
proteins, polarity and charge-state dependent structural changes may
be more significant. The charged-residue model is most often used
to explain the ionization of large macromolecules based on the Rayleigh
limit, which defines the upper limit of charge that a droplet can
hold. Because ions of both polarities have similar structures and
the Rayleigh limit does not depend on polarity, these results cannot
be explained by the charged-residue model alone. Rather, the observed
charge-state distributions are most consistent with charge-carrier
emissions during the final stages of analyte desolvation, with lower
charge-carrier emission energies for anions than the corresponding
cations. These results suggest that the observed charge-state distributions
in most native mass spectrometry experiments are determined by charge-carrier
emission processes; although the Rayleigh limit may determine the
gas-phase charge states of larger species, e.g., virus capsids