Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA
Abstract
AbstractBroader adoption of native mass spectrometry (MS) and ion mobility‐mass spectrometry (IM‐MS) has propelled the development of several techniques which take advantage of the selectivity, sensitivity, and speed of MS to make measurements of complex biological molecules in the gas phase. One such method, collision induced unfolding (CIU), has risen to prominence in recent years, due to its well documented capability to detect shifts in structural stability of biological molecules in response to external stimuli (e.g., mutations, stress, non‐covalent interactions, sample conditions etc.). This increase in reported CIU measurements is enabled partly due to advances in IM‐MS instrumentation by vendors, and also innovative method development by researchers. This perspective highlights a few of these advances and concludes with a look forward toward the future of the gas phase unfolding field.