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Protein Unfolding in Freeze Frames: Intermediate States are Revealed by Variable-Temperature Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry

Authors :
Jakub Ujma
Jacquelyn Jhingree
Emma Norgate
Rosie Upton
Xudong Wang
Florian Benoit
Bruno Bellina
Perdita Barran
Source :
Analytical Chemistry. 94:12248-12255
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2022.

Abstract

The gas phase is an idealized laboratory for the study of protein structure, from which it is possible to examine stable and transient forms of mass-selected ions in the absence of bulk solvent. With ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS) apparatus built to operate at both cryogenic and elevated temperatures, we have examined conformational transitions that occur to the monomeric proteins: ubiquitin, lysozyme, and α-synuclein as a function of temperature and in source activation. We rationalize the experimental observations with a temperature-dependent framework model and comparison to known conformers. Data from ubiquitin show unfolding transitions that proceed through diverse and highly elongated intermediate states, which converge to more compact structures. These findings contrast with data obtained from lysozyme─a protein where (un)-folding plasticity is restricted by four disulfide linkages, although this is alleviated in its reduced form. For structured proteins, collision activation of the protein ions in-source enables subsequent "freezing" or thermal annealing of unfolding intermediates, whereas disordered proteins restructure substantially at 250 K even without activation, indicating that cold denaturation can occur without solvent. These data are presented in the context of a toy model framework that describes the relative occupancy of the available conformational space.

Details

ISSN :
15206882 and 00032700
Volume :
94
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Analytical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9edcfda3f78adce5bdb6f57018394122
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c03066