• Title of article

    Effect of cyclization of N-terminal glutamine and carbamidomethyl-cysteine (residues) on the chromatographic behavior of peptides in reversed-phase chromatography

  • Author/Authors

    Reimer، نويسنده , , Janice and Shamshurin، نويسنده , , Dmitry and Harder، نويسنده , , Michael and Yamchuk، نويسنده , , Andriy and Spicer، نويسنده , , Vic and Krokhin، نويسنده , , Oleg V.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    5101
  • To page
    5107
  • Abstract
    N-terminal loss of ammonia is a typical peptide modification chemical artifact observed in bottom-up proteomics experiments. It occurs both in vivo for N-terminal glutamine and in vitro following enzymatic cleavage for both N-terminal glutamine and cysteine alkylated with iodoacetamide. In addition to a mass change of −17.03 Da, modified peptides exhibit increased chromatographic retention in reversed-phase (RP) HPLC systems. The magnitude of this increase varies significantly depending on the peptide sequence and the chromatographic condition used. We have monitored these changes for extensive sets (more than 200 each) of tryptic Gln and Cys N-terminated species. Peptides were separated on 100 Å pore size C18 phases using identical acetonitrile gradient slopes with 3 different eluent compositions: 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid; 0.1% formic acid and 20 mM ammonium formate at pH 10 as ion-pairing modifiers. The observed effect of this modification on RP retention is the product of increased intrinsic hydrophobicity of the modified N-terminal residue, lowering or removing the effect of ion-pairing formation on the hydrophobicity of adjacent residues at acidic pHs; and possibly the increased formation of amphipathic helical structures when the positive charge is removed. Larger retention shifts were observed for Cys terminated peptides compared to Gln, and for smaller peptides. Also the size of the retention increase depends on the eluent conditions: pH 10 ≪ trifluoroacetic acid < formic acid. Different approaches for incorporation these findings in the peptide retention prediction models are discussed.
  • Keywords
    Chemically modified peptides , Peptide reversed-phase HPLC , Peptide retention prediction
  • Journal title
    Journal of Chromatography A
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Journal of Chromatography A
  • Record number

    1514285