• Application Note

Gas Phase Protein Structure is Consistent with Structural Measurements Made by X-Ray Crystallography

Gas Phase Protein Structure is Consistent with Structural Measurements Made by X-Ray Crystallography

  • Iain Campuzano
  • Waters Corporation

Abstract

Here, we investigate and present the use of charge-reduced (proton transfer) myoglobin, cytochrome C, and lysozyme as T-Wave ion mobility calibration standards and their use determines the collisional cross-sections (CCSs) of biological protein complexes.

Introduction

It is important for structural biologists to know that the native protein complex they are analyzing by mass spectrometry has the same stoichiometry and shape as those determined by other techniques, such as X-ray crystallography or nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The Waters SYNAPT High Definition MS (HDMS) System and nanoelectrospray sources lend themselves particularly well to preserving non-covalent interactions, thus allowing one to analyze compounds in their native conformation and stoichiometry1.

The structure of a protein or a protein complex is critical to its function. Utilizing the T-Wave2 ion mobility capability of the SYNAPT HDMS System allows you to measure the intact mass of the biological complex and infer the shape of the intact complex; this provides some insight into the function of the protein complex.

Here, we investigate and present the use of charge-reduced7 (proton transfer) myoglobin, cytochrome C, and lysozyme as T-Wave ion mobility calibration standards and their use determines the collisional cross-sections (CCSs) of biological protein complexes.

We also compare the T-Wave derived CCSs to the theoretically calculated CCSs, which use the open source code MOBCAL3,4. MOBCAL allows you to input a coordinate file, which in this case is an RSCB Protein Data Bank (PDB) (//www.rcsb.org/pdb/home/home.do) coordinate file of a protein of interest. Using the Projection Approximation1,3 algorithm, the orientation-averaged CCS is reported for the PDB structure of interest.1

Experimental

The instrument used in this study was a SYNAPT HDMS System, which combines high-efficiency ion mobility-based measurements and separations with a hybrid quadrupole orthogonal acceleration time-of-flight (oa-TOF) mass spectrometer, as shown in Figure 1. Samples were introduced with a borosilcate glass nano-electrospray tip.   

 Schematic of the SYNAPT HDMS System
Figure 1. Schematic of the SYNAPT HDMS System.

The protein standards Myoglobin, Cytochrome-C, and Lysozyme were dissolved in acetonitrile 50% (v/v), formic acid 0.1% (v/v), and 1,8-diazabicycloundec-7ene (DBU)5 0.1% (v/v). For example, the presence of DBU 0.1% (v/v) reduced the average charge state of myoglobin from +18 to +10.

T-Wave ion mobility calibration was carried out using a modification of an existing protocol6, which utilizes charge-reduced protein standards. The protein multiply charged ions, of known collisional cross section7, used for IMS calibration were: Myoglobin +20 to +4 and Cytochrome-C +16 to +3. The IMS calibration was validated using the multiply-charged ions of the protein lysozyme, whose CCSs have previously been determined on a standard IMS drift tube7.

Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase and bovine carbonic anhydrase were infused into the mass spectrometer at a concentration of 1 μM in an aqueous 50 mM ammonium acetate solution.

MS and IMS Conditions

MS system:

SYNAPT HDMS System

Ionization mode:

nanoESI+

Capillary voltage:

1 kV

Cone voltage:

30 V

Trap CE:

8 V

Trans CE:

4 V

IMS bias:

20 V

Acquisition range:

m/z 1000 to 32,000 (256 μsec)

Trap/trans gas:

SF6

IMS gas:

N2

MS T-Wave speed:

250 m/sec

IMS T-Wave height:

7.5 to 8.5 V

Results and Discussion

Upon infusion of an aqueous 1.0 μM solution of ADH into the mass spectrometer, a narrow, well-defined multiply-charged envelope was observed at m/z 6,000, corresponding to intact ADH tetramer of mass 147.7 kDa, as shown in Figure 2. A narrow multiply-charged envelope was also observed at m/z 3,000, corresponding to the ADH monomer (37 kDa). For carbonic anhydrase, only a monomer (29 kDa) was observed.

Nanoelectrospray spectrum of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase
Figure 2. Nanoelectrospray spectrum of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase (upper spectra) and carbonic anhydrase (lower spectra) acquired over the m/z range 600 to 12,000.
Structure of carbonic anhydrase
Figure 3. Structure of carbonic anhydrase (1V9E) acquired from the RSCB Protein Data Bank.
Structures of the ADH monomer
Figure 4. Structures of the ADH monomer (1PSO) and tetramer (2HCY) acquired from the RSCB Protein Data Bank.

The native mass spectral stoichiometric information obtained for carbonic anhydrase and alcohol dehydrogenase are consistent with the stoichiometry reported by the available X-ray crystallographic data of the proteins of interest. This demonstrates that within a mass spectrometer you can retain native non-covalent interaction, which is observed in other biophysical characterization techniques, such as X-ray crystallogrpahy or NMR. Electrospray ionization and mass spectrometry, therefore, do not disrupt any important non-covalent subunit interactions that may be present within the protein complex

The MOBCAL program can be used to calculate the collisional cross-section of any biological or inorganic molecule that has a published 3-dimensional structure. The T-Wave derived CCSs for the ADH monomer, ADH tetramer, and carbonic anhydrase all agree with the MOBCAL projection approximation derived CCSs, as shown in Tables 1, 2a, and 2b.

T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual carbonic anhydrase charge states
Table 1. T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual carbonic anhydrase charge states. The MOBCAL Projection Approximation CCS values for PDB file 1V9E are 1877 Å2.
T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual ADH monomer charge states
Table 2a. T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual ADH monomer charge states. The MOBCAL Projection Approximation CCS values for PDB file 1PSO is 2371 Å2.
T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual ADH tetramer charge states
Table 2b. T-Wave IMS measured CCSs for the individual ADH tetramer charge states. The MOBCAL Projection Approximation CCS values for PDB file 2HCY is 7269 Å2.

This provides more supporting evidence that the gas phase stoichiometry of protein complexes and their shape are consistent between mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography, two very different biophysical characterization techniques. The advantage of mass spectrometry coupled to ion mobility is that they provide mass, stoichiometric, and size information on the protein complex of interest very rapidly in the order of a few minutes.

Conclusion

  • Native gas phase stoichiometry for protein structures are consistent with structures determined by X-ray crystallography
  • The T-Wave measured CCSs for the ADH monomer, ADH tetramer, and carbonic anhydrase consistently match the theoretical calculated CCSs generated by the MOBCAL program
  • Solution-phase charge reduction is an efficient way of accessing the lower charge state of proteins, which are not accessible under normal electrospray conditions
  • Ions with a lower overall charge display extended ion mobility drift-times, which can be used to extend the existing T-Wave ion mobility calibration routine
  • The extended IMS calibration was successfully validated with known published CCSs of the protein lysozyme

References

  1. Ruotolo G, Campuzano I, Sandercock AM, Bateman RH, Robinson CV. Evidence for Macromolecular Protein Rings in the Absence of Bulk Water. Science. 2005 Dec 9; 310, 1651–1661.
  2. 2. Giles K, Pringle S, Worthington K, Bateman R. Travelling Wave Ion Propulsion in Collision Cells. Presented at the 51st ASMS Conference, Montreal, Canada 2003. The travelling wave device described here is similar to that described by Kirchner in US Patent 5, 206, 506 (1993).
  3. 3. Mesleh MF, Hunter JM, Schvartsburg AA, Schatz GC, Jarrold MF. Structural Information from Ion Mobility Measurements: Effects of the Long-Range Potential. J. Phys. Chem. 1996, 100, 16082–16086.
  4. https://www.indiana.edu/~nano/Software.html
  5. Bagal D, Zhang H, Schnier PD. Gas-phase Proton-transfer Chemistry Coupled with TOF Mass Spectrometry and Ion Mobility-MS for the Facile Analysis of Poly(ethylene glycols) and PEGylated Polypeptide Conjugates. Anal. Chem. 2008 Apr 1;80(7):2408-18.80 (7) 2408–2418.
  6. Ruotolo BT, Benesch JL, Sandercock AM, Hyung SH, Robinson CV. Ion mobility-Mass Spectrometry Analysis of Large Protein Complexes. Nat Protoc. 2008;3(7):1139–52.
  7. https://www.indiana.edu/~clemmer/Research/research.htm

720002818, October 2008

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