Abstract
The impact of supercharging on the fragmentation patterns of six proteins, ubiquitin, cytochrome c,
staph nuclease, myoglobin, dihydrofolate reductase, and carbonic anhydrase, was investigated for five
activation methods, HCD, ETD, EThcD, 213 nm UVPD, and 193 nm UVPD. Changes in sequence coverage,
alterations in the number and abundance of preferential cleavages (N-terminal to proline, C-terminal to
aspartic or glutamic acid, adjacent to aromatic residues), and changes in individual fragment ion
abundances were evaluated. Large decreases in sequence coverage were observed upon supercharging
of proteins activated by HCD, whereas modest gains were observed for ETD. Minimal changes in
sequence coverage were observed when using EThcD, 213 nm UVPD, and 193 nm UVPD, all which
tended to display the highest sequence coverages of the activation methods. Specific preferential
backbone cleavage sites were increasingly enhanced for all proteins in supercharged states for all
activation methods, particularly for HCD, 213 nm UVPD and 193 nm UVPD. Even if large gains in
sequence coverages were not apparent for the highest charge states, supercharging consistently led to
at least a few new backbone cleavage sites for ETD, EThcD, 213 nm UVPD and 193 nm UVPD for all
proteins.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Figures
Description
Tables summarizing the protein sequences, representative MS/MS spectra for all proteins and activation methods, sequence coverage maps, additional figures displaying preferential cleavage abundances, Venn diagrams displaying unique cleavage sites, and fragment abundance maps
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