Top-Down Mass Spectrometry and Assigning Internal Fragments for Determining Disulfide Bond Positions in Proteins

19 July 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Disulfide bonds in proteins have a substantial impact on protein structure, stability, and biological activity. Localizing disulfide bonds is critical for understanding protein folding and higher-order structure. Conventional top-down mass spectrometry (TD-MS) where only terminal fragments are assigned, for disulfide intact proteins can access disulfide information, but suffers from low fragmentation efficiency, limiting sequence coverage. Here, we show that assigning internal fragments generated from TD-MS enhances the sequence coverage of disulfide intact proteins by 20-60% by returning information from the interior of the protein sequence, which cannot be obtained by terminal fragments alone. The inclusion of internal fragments can extend the sequence information of disulfide intact proteins to near complete sequence coverage. Importantly, the enhanced sequence information that arise from the assignment of internal fragments can be used to determine the relative position of disulfide bonds and the exact disulfide connectivity between cysteines. The data presented here demonstrates the benefits of incorporating internal fragment analysis into TD-MS workflow for analyzing disulfide intact proteins, which would be valuable for characterizing biotherapeutic proteins such as monoclonal antibodies and antibody-drug conjugates.

Keywords

Disulfide bonds
Top-down mass spectrometry
Internal fragments
Electron-based dissociation (ExD)
Collisionally activated dissociation (CAD)
Intact proteins

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Top-Down Mass Spectrometry and Assigning Internal Fragments for Determining Disulfide Bond Positions in Proteins
Description
Supporting information for the main manuscript
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