Characterization of Complex Proteoform Mixtures by Online Nanoflow Ion-Exchange Chromatography - Native Mass Spectrometry

13 March 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The characterization of proteins and complexes in biological systems is essential to establish their critical properties and to understand their unique functions in a plethora of bioprocesses. However, it is highly difficult to analyze low levels of intact proteins in their native states (especially those exceeding 30 kDa) with liquid chromatography (LC) - mass spectrometry (MS). Herein, we describe for the first time the use of nanoflow ion-exchange chromatography directly coupled with native MS to resolve mixtures of intact proteins. Reference proteins and protein complexes with molecular weight between 10 and 150 kDa and a model cell lysate were separated using a salt-mediated pH gradient method using volatile additives. The method allowed for low detection limits (0.22 pmol of monoclonal antibodies) while proteins presented non-denatured MS (low number of charges and limited charge state distributions) and the oligomeric state of the complexes analyzed was mostly kept. Excellent chromatographic separations including the resolution of different proteoforms of large proteins (> 140 kDa) and a peak capacity of 82 in a 30-minute gradient, were obtained. The proposed setup and workflows show great potential for analyzing diverse proteoforms in native top-down proteomics, opening unprecedented opportunities for clinical studies and other sample-limited applications.

Keywords

ion exchange
intact proteins
mass spectrometry
nanoflow
nondenaturing analysis

Supplementary materials

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Title
Characterization of Complex Proteoform Mixtures by Online Nanoflow Ion-Exchange Chromatography - Native Mass Spectrometry
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Supplementary Information
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