4.5 Article

Probing D- and L-Adrenaline Binding to β2-Adrenoreceptor Peptide Motifs by Gas-Phase Photodissociation Cross-Linking and Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry

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Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jasms.1c00019

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Funding

  1. Chemistry Division of the U.S. National Science Foundation [CHE-1951518, CHE-1661815]
  2. Klaus and Mary Ann Saegebarth Endowment
  3. Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports of the Czech Republic (the ERDF project Nanotechnologies for future) [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000754]
  4. Palacky University [IGA_PrF_2020_030]

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In this study, gas-phase ion complexes formed by D- and L-adrenaline derivatives with specific peptide sequences were investigated. While attempting to detect cross-links in the complexes using photolysis and collision-induced dissociation, no cross-linking was found. The temperature dependence of internal dynamics in the complexes as well as the specifics of the adrenaline carbene reactions were discussed.
Diazirine-tagged D- and L-adrenaline derivatives formed abundant noncovalent gas-phase ion complexes with peptides N-Ac-SSIVSFY-NH2 (peptide S) and N-Ac-VYILLNW-IGY-NH2 (peptide V) upon electrospray ionization. These peptide sequences represent the binding motifs in the beta(2)-adrenoreceptor. The structures of the gas-phase complexes were investigated by selective laser photodissociation of the diazirine chromophore at 354 nm, which resulted in a loss of N-2 and formation of a transient carbene intermediate in the adrenaline ligand without causing its expulsion. The photolyzed complexes were analyzed by collision-induced dissociation (CID-MS3 and CID-MS4) in an attempt to detect cross-links and establish the binding sites. However, no cross-linking was detected in the complexes regardless of the peptide and D- or L-configuration in adrenaline. Cyclic ion mobility measurements were used to obtain collision cross sections (CCS) in N-2 for the peptide S complexes. These showed identical values, 334 +/- 0.9 angstrom(2), for complexes of the L- and D-adrenaline derivatives, respectively. Identical CCS were also obtained for peptide S complexes with natural L- and D-adrenaline, 317 +/- 1.2 angstrom(2), respectively. Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) in combination with full geometry optimization by density functional theory calculations provided structures for the complexes that were used to calculate theoretical CCS with the ion trajectory method. A close match (337 angstrom(2)) was found for a single low Gibbs energy structure that displayed a binding pocket with Ser 2 and Ser 5 residues forming hydrogen bonds to the adrenaline catechol hydroxyls. Analysis of the BOMD trajectories revealed a small number of contacts between the incipient carbene carbon atom in the ligand and X-H bonds in the peptide, which was consistent with the lack of cross-linking. Temperature dependence of the internal dynamics of peptide S-adrenaline complexes as well as the specifics of the adrenaline carbene reactions are discussed. In particular, peptide amide hydrogen transfer to the carbene carbon atom was calculated to require crossing a potential energy barrier, which may hamper cross-linking in competition with carbene internal rearrangements.

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