Top-down mass spectrometry of integral membrane proteins

Expert Rev Proteomics. 2006 Dec;3(6):585-96. doi: 10.1586/14789450.3.6.585.

Abstract

Top-down mass spectrometry focuses on intact proteins, thereby avoiding loss of information accompanying 'shotgun' protocols that reduce the proteome to a collection of peptides. A suite of liquid-chromatography technologies has been developed for purification of intact integral membrane proteins in aqueous/organic solvent mixtures compatible with biological 'soft-ionization' mass spectrometry, preserving covalent structure into the gas phase. Multiply charged protein ions are fragmented in the gas phase, using either collision-activated or electron-capture dissociation, thus yielding complex spectra of sequence-dependent product ions that collectively define the original native covalent state of an intact protein. Top down offers a more detail-orientated approach to post-transcriptional and post-translational diversity allowing an enhanced insight beyond genomic translation, which has now extended into the bilayer proteome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Bacteriorhodopsins / chemistry
  • Humans
  • Mass Spectrometry / methods*
  • Membrane Proteins / chemistry*
  • Proteomics

Substances

  • Membrane Proteins
  • Bacteriorhodopsins