Unser 10. Leibniz Plant Biochemistry Symposium am 7. und 8. Mai war ein großer Erfolg. Thematisch ging es in diesem Jahr um neue Methoden und Forschungsansätze der Naturstoffchemie. Die exzellenten Vorträge über Wirkstoffe…
Omanische Heilpflanze im Fokus der Phytochemie IPB-Wissenschaftler und Partner aus Dhofar haben jüngst die omanische Heilpflanze Terminalia dhofarica unter die phytochemische Lupe genommen. Die Pflanze ist reich an…
Geschmack ist vorhersagbar: Mit FlavorMiner. FlavorMiner heißt das Tool, das IPB-Chemiker und Partner aus Kolumbien jüngst entwickelt haben. Das Programm kann, basierend auf maschinellem Lernen (KI), anhand der…
MassBank is the first public repository of mass spectra of small chemical compounds for life sciences (<3000 Da). The database contains 605 electron‐ionization mass spectrometry(EI‐MS), 137 fast atom bombardment MS and 9276 electrospray ionization (ESI)‐MSn data of 2337 authentic compounds of metabolites, 11 545 EI‐MS and 834 other‐MS data of 10 286 volatile natural and synthetic compounds, and 3045 ESI‐MS2 data of 679 synthetic drugs contributed by 16 research groups (January 2010). ESI‐MS2 data were analyzed under nonstandardized, independent experimental conditions. MassBank is a distributed database. Each research group provides data from its own MassBank data servers distributed on the Internet. MassBank users can access either all of the MassBank data or a subset of the data by specifying one or more experimental conditions. In a spectral search to retrieve mass spectra similar to a query mass spectrum, the similarity score is calculated by a weighted cosine correlation in which weighting exponents on peak intensity and the mass‐to‐charge ratio are optimized to the ESI‐MS2 data. MassBank also provides a merged spectrum for each compound prepared by merging the analyzed ESI‐MS2 data on an identical compound under different collision‐induced dissociation conditions. Data merging has significantly improved the precision of the identification of a chemical compound by 21–23% at a similarity score of 0.6. Thus, MassBank is useful for the identification of chemical compounds and the publication of experimental data.
Publikation
Fedorova, M.; Frolov, A.; Hoffmann, R.;Fragmentation behavior of Amadori-peptides obtained by non-enzymatic glycosylation of lysine residues with ADP-ribose in tandem mass spectrometryJ. Mass Spectrom.45664-669(2010)DOI: 10.1002/jms.1758
Mono‐ and poly‐adenosine diphosphate (ADP)‐ribosylation are common post‐translational modifications incorporated by sequence‐specific enzymes at, predominantly, arginine, asparagine, glutamic acid or aspartic acid residues, whereas non‐enzymatic ADP‐ribosylation (glycation) modifies lysine and cysteine residues. These glycated proteins and peptides (Amadori‐compounds) are commonly found in organisms, but have so far not been investigated to any great degree. In this study, we have analyzed their fragmentation characteristics using different mass spectrometry (MS) techniques. In matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)‐MS, the ADP‐ribosyl group was cleaved, almost completely, at the pyrophosphate bond by in‐source decay. In contrast, this cleavage was very weak in electrospray ionization (ESI)‐MS. The same fragmentation site also dominated the MALDI‐PSD (post‐source decay) and ESI‐CID (collision‐induced dissociation) mass spectra. The remaining phospho‐ribosyl group (formed by the loss of adenosine monophosphate) was stable, providing a direct and reliable identification of the modification site via the b‐ and y‐ion series. Cleavage of the ADP‐ribose pyrophosphate bond under CID conditions gives access to both neutral loss (347.10 u) and precursor‐ion scans (m/z 348.08), and thereby permits the identification of ADP‐ribosylated peptides in complex mixtures with high sensitivity and specificity. With electron transfer dissociation (ETD), the ADP‐ribosyl group was stable, providing ADP‐ribosylated c‐ and z‐ions, and thus allowing reliable sequence analyses.