4.5 Article

Liquid Native MALDI Mass Spectrometry for the Detection of Protein-Protein Complexes

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 1981-1994

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13361-018-2015-x

Keywords

Native mass spectrometry; Native MALDI; Nondenaturing conditions; Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization; Liquid matrix; Ionic matrix; Noncovalent complexes; Protein-protein interactions; Protein-ligand interactions; HU protein; Streptavidin; Biotin

Funding

  1. FEDER [2699-33931]
  2. Region Centre Val de Loire
  3. Universite d'Orleans
  4. CNRS

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Native mass spectrometry (MS) encompasses methods to keep noncovalent interactions of biomolecular complexes intact in the gas phase throughout the instrument and to measure the mass-to-charge ratios of supramolecular complexes directly in the mass spectrometer. Electrospray ionization (ESI) in nondenaturing conditions is now an established method to characterize noncovalent systems. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI), on the other hand, consumes low quantities of samples and largely tolerates contaminants, making it a priori attractive for native MS. However, so-called native MALDI approaches have so far been based on solid deposits, where the rapid transition of the sample through a solid state can engender the loss of native conformations. Here we present a new method for native MS based on liquid deposits and MALDI ionization, unambiguously detecting intact noncovalent protein complexes by direct desorption from a liquid spot for the first time. To control for aggregation, we worked with HU, a heterodimer that does not spontaneously rearrange into homodimers in solution. Screening through numerous matrix solutions to observe first the monomeric protein, then the dimer complex, we settled on a nondenaturing binary matrix solution composed of acidic and basic organic matrices in glycerol, which is stable in vacuo. The role of temporal and spatial laser irradiation patterns was found to be critical. Both a protein-protein and a protein-ligand complex could be observed free of aggregation. To minimize gas-phase dissociation, source parameters were optimized to achieve a conservation of complexes above 50% for both systems.

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