Authors
Jesper V Olsen, Shao-En Ong, Matthias Mann
Publication date
2004/6/1
Journal
Molecular & cellular proteomics
Volume
3
Issue
6
Pages
608-614
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Almost all large-scale projects in mass spectrometry-based proteomics use trypsin to convert protein mixtures into more readily analyzable peptide populations. When searching peptide fragmentation spectra against sequence databases, potentially matching peptide sequences can be required to conform to tryptic specificity, namely, cleavage exclusively C-terminal to arginine or lysine. In many published reports, however, significant numbers of proteins are identified by non-tryptic peptides. Here we use the sub-parts per million mass accuracy of a new ion trap Fourier transform mass spectrometer to achieve more than a 100-fold increased confidence in peptide identification compared with typical ion trap experiments and show that trypsin cleaves solely C-terminal to arginine and lysine. We find that non-tryptic peptides occur only as the C-terminal peptides of proteins and as breakup products of fully tryptic …
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Scholar articles
JV Olsen, SE Ong, M Mann - Molecular & cellular proteomics, 2004