Monitoring the stabilities of a mixture of peptides by mass-spectrometry-based techniques

Author:

Fuller Daniel R1,Conant Christopher R1,El-Baba Tarick J1,Zhang Zhichao1,Molloy Kameron R2,Zhang Connie S2,Hales David A2,Clemmer David E1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

2. Department of Chemistry, Hendrix College, Conway, AR, USA

Abstract

Biomolecular degradation plays a key role in proteostasis. Typically, proteolytic enzymes degrade proteins into smaller peptides by breaking amino acid bonds between specific residues. Cleavage around proline residues is often missed and requires highly specific enzymes for peptide processing due to the cyclic proline side-chain. However, degradation can occur spontaneously (i.e. in the absence of enzymes). In this study, the influence of the first residue on the stability of a series of penultimate proline containing peptides, with the sequence Xaa–Pro–Gly–Gly (where Xaa is any amino acid), is investigated with mass spectrometry techniques. Peptides were incubated as mixtures at various solution temperatures (70℃ to 90℃) and were periodically sampled over the duration of the experiment. At elevated temperatures, we observe dissociation after the Xaa–Pro motif for all sequences, but at different rates. Transition state thermochemistry was obtained by studying the temperature-dependent kinetics and although all peptides show relatively small differences in the transition state free energies (∼95 kJ/mol), there is significant variability in the transition state entropy and enthalpy. This demonstrates that the side-chain of the first amino acid has a significant influence on the stability of the Xaa–Pro sequence. From these data, we demonstrate the ability to simultaneously measure the dissociation kinetics and relative transition state thermochemistries for a mixture of peptides, which vary only in the identity of the N-terminal amino acid.

Funder

Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences Fellowship

Hendrix College Odyssey Program

Hendrix College Faculty Project Grants

National Institutes of Health

Robert and Marjorie Mann Fellowship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Spectroscopy,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,General Medicine

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