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Establishing a Top-Down Proteomics Platform on a Time-of-Flight Instrument with Electron-Activated Dissociation

Richard Searfoss, Emily Zahn, Zongtao Lin, Benjamin A. García

2025Journal of Proteome Research13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Top-down proteomics is the study of intact proteins and their post-translational modifications with mass spectrometry. Historically, this field is more challenging than its bottom-up counterpart because the species are much bigger and have a larger number of possible combinations of sequences and modifications; thus, there is a great need for technological development. With improvements in instrumentation and a multiplicity of fragmentation modes available, top-down proteomics is quickly gaining in popularity with renewed attention on increasing confidence in identification and quantification. Here, we systematically evaluated the Sciex ZenoTOF 7600 system for top-down proteomics, applying standards in the field to validate the platform and further experimenting with its capabilities in electron-activated dissociation and post-translational modification site localization. The instrument demonstrated robustness in standard proteins for platform QC, as aided by zeno trapping. We were also able to apply this to histone post-translational modifications, achieving high sequence coverage that allowed PTM's site localization across protein sequences with optimized EAD fragmentation. We demonstrated the ability to analyze proteins spanning the mass range and included analysis of glycosylated proteins. This is a reference point for future top-down proteomics experiments to be conducted on the ZenoTOF 7600 system.

Topics & Concepts

Dissociation (chemistry)ProteomicsElectronTime of flightChemistryNanotechnologyComputer scienceChromatographyMaterials sciencePhysicsNuclear physicsBiochemistryPhysical chemistryGeneMass Spectrometry Techniques and ApplicationsAdvanced Proteomics Techniques and ApplicationsIon-surface interactions and analysis
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