Naturally occurring amino acids have been broadly used as additives to improve protein solubility and inhibit aggregation. In this study, improvements in protein signal intensity obtained with the addition of l -serine, and structural analogs, to the desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) spray solvent were measured. The results were interpreted at the hand of proposed mechanisms of solution additive effects on protein solubility and dissolution. DESI-MS allows for these processes to be studied efficiently using dilute concentrations of additives and small amounts of proteins, advantages that represent real benefits compared to classical methods of studying protein stability and aggregation. We show that serine significantly increases the protein signal in DESI-MS when native proteins are undergoing unfolding during the dissolution process with an acidic solvent system ( p -value = 0.0001), or with ammonium bicarbonate under denaturing conditions for proteins with high isoelectric points ( p -value = 0.001). We establish that a similar increase in the protein signal cannot be observed with direct ESI-MS, and the observed increase is therefore not related to ionization processes or changes in the physical properties of the bulk solution. The importance of the presence of serine during protein conformational changes while undergoing dissolution is demonstrated through comparisons between the analyses of proteins deposited in native or unfolded states and by using native state-preserving and denaturing desorption solvents. We hypothesize that direct, non-covalent interactions involving all three functional groups of serine are involved in the beneficial effect on protein solubility and dissolution. Supporting evidence for a direct interaction include a reduction in efficacy with d -serine or the racemic mixture, indicating a non-bulk-solution physical property effect; insensitivity to the sample surface type or relative placement of serine addition; and a reduction in efficacy with any modifications to the serine structure, most notably the carboxyl functional group. An alternative hypothesis, also supported by some of our observations, could involve the role of serine clusters in the mechanism of solubility enhancement. Our study demonstrates the capability of DESI-MS together with complementary ESI-MS experiments as a novel tool for understanding protein solubility and dissolution and investigating the mechanism of action for solubility-enhancing additives.
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Effects of Amino Acid Additives on Protein Stability during Electrothermal Supercharging in ESI-MS
The surprising formation of highly charged protein ions from aqueous ammonium bicarbonate solution is a fascinating phenomenon referred to as electrothermal supercharging (ETS). Although the precise mechanism involved is not clearly understood, previous studies predominantly suggest that ETS is due to native protein destabilization in the presence of bicarbonate anion inside the electrospray ionization droplets under high temperatures and spray voltages. To evaluate existing hypotheses surrounding the underlying mechanism of ETS, the effects of several additives on protein charging under ETS conditions were investigated. The changes in the protein charge state distributions were compared by measuring the ratios between the intensities of highest intensity charge states of native and unfolded protein envelopes and shifts in the lowest and highest observed charge states. This study demonstrated that source temperature plays a more important role in ETS compared to spray voltage, especially when using a nebulized microelectrospray ionization source. Moreover, the effect of amino acids on ETS were generally in good agreement with the extensive literature available on the stabilization or destabilization of proteins by these additives in bulk solution. Among the natural amino acids, protein supercharging was significantly reduced by proline and glycine; however, imidazole provided the highest degree of noncovalent complex stabilization against ETS, outperforming the amino acids. Overall, our study shows that the simple addition of stabilizing reagents such as proline and imidazole can reduce the extent of apparent protein unfolding and supercharging in ammonium bicarbonate solution and provide evidence against the roles of charge depletion and thermal unfolding during ETS.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2003379
- PAR ID:
- 10525826
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Chemical Society
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
- Volume:
- 35
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 1044-0305
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 151 to 157
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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