Electrophoresis, Vol.25, No.13, 1973-1980, 2004
Two-dimensional liquid chromatography-capillary zone electrophoresis-sheathless electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry: Evaluation for peptide analysis and protein identification
A peptide separation strategy that combines two-dimensional (2-D) liquid chromatography (LC)-capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) with tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) is described for the identification of proteins in complex mixtures. To test the effectiveness of this strategy, a serum sample was depleted of the high-abundance proteins by methanol precipitation, digested with trypsin to generate a complex peptide mixture, and separated into 96 fractions by reversed-phase (RP)-LC. Compared to ion-exchange LC separations, RPLC provides much higher resolution and peak capacity. Fractions were collected off-line from the RPLC separation, and subjected to short 20 min CZE separations. The separated zones were introduced to the mass spectrometer through a sheathless electrospray ionization interface that is integrated on the separation capillary. The ease of fabrication of the interface and its durability allowed for the analysis of all fractions on a single capillary in a relatively short. analysis time. A stable electrospray was produced at nanoliter flowrates by augmenting analyte electrophoretic and electroosmotic mobilities with pressure-assisted flow. Unlike first-dimensional ion-exchange LC fractionation, where there is a large degree of overlap, the CZE-MS results show less than 15% overlap between neighboring RPLC fractions.
Keywords:capillary electrophoresis;multidimensional separations;peptides;reversed-phase liquid chromatography;serum proteins;sheathless electrospray ionization;tandem mass spectrometry