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Improved Peak Detection and Deconvolution of Native Electrospray Mass Spectra from Large Protein Complexes

Cited 49 time in Web of Science Cited 53 time in Scopus
Authors

Lu, Jonathan; Trnka, Michael J.; Roh, Soung-Hun; Robinson, Philip J. J.; Shiau, Carrie; Fujimori, Danica Galonic; Chiu, Wah; Burlingame, Alma L.; Guan, Shenheng

Issue Date
2015-12
Publisher
Springer New York LLC
Citation
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry, Vol.26 No.12, pp.2141-2151
Abstract
Native electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry (native MS) measures biomolecules under conditions that preserve most aspects of protein tertiary and quaternary structure, enabling direct characterization of large intact protein assemblies. However, native spectra derived from these assemblies are often partially obscured by low signal-to-noise as well as broad peak shapes because of residual solvation and adduction after the electrospray process. The wide peak widths together with the fact that sequential charge state series from highly charged ions are closely spaced means that native spectra containing multiple species often suffer from high degrees of peak overlap or else contain highly interleaved charge envelopes. This situation presents a challenge for peak detection, correct charge state and charge envelope assignment, and ultimately extraction of the relevant underlying mass values of the noncovalent assemblages being investigated. In this report, we describe a comprehensive algorithm developed for addressing peak detection, peak overlap, and charge state assignment in native mass spectra, called PeakSeeker. Overlapped peaks are detected by examination of the second derivative of the raw mass spectrum. Charge state distributions of the molecular species are determined by fitting linear combinations of charge envelopes to the overall experimental mass spectrum. This software is capable of deconvoluting heterogeneous, complex, and noisy native mass spectra of large protein assemblies as demonstrated by analysis of (1) synthetic mononucleosomes containing severely overlapping peaks, (2) an RNA polymerase II/α-amanitin complex with many closely interleaved ion signals, and (3) human TriC complex containing high levels of background noise.
ISSN
1044-0305
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/204732
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13361-015-1235-6
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Cryogenic Electron Microscopy (Cryo-EM), Structural Biology, 분자생물학, 생물물리학, 생화학

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