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Location of alkali metal binding sites in endothelin A selective receptor antagonists, cyclo(D-Trp-D-Asp-Pro-D-Val-Leu) and cyclo(D-Trp-D-Asp-Pro-D-Ile-Leu), from multistep collisionally activated decompositions

✍ Scribed by Ngoka, Lambert C. M.; Gross, Michael L.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
216 KB
Volume
35
Category
Article
ISSN
1076-5174

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✦ Synopsis


We previously showed by using mass spectrometry that endothelin A selective receptor antagonists BQ123 and JKC301 form novel coordination compounds with sodium ions. This property may underlie the ability of an ET A antagonist to induce net tubular sodium reabsorption in the proximal tubule cells and reverse acute renal failure induced by severe ishemia. We have now defined the metal binding sites on BQ123 and JKC301 by subjecting the metal-containing peptides to multiple stages of collisionally activated decomposition (CAD) in an ion trap mass spectrometer. When submitted to low-energy CAD, the ring opens at the Asp-Pro amide bond. The metal ion, which bonds, inter alia, to the carbonyl oxygen of the proline residue, acts as a fixed charge site, and directs a charge-remote, sequence-specific fragmentation of the ring-opened peptide. Amino acid residues are sequentially cleaved from the C-terminal end, and the terminal aziridinone structure moves one step toward the N-terminus with each C-terminal amino acid residue removed. These observations are the basis of a new method to sequence cyclic peptides. Amino acid residues are observed as sets of three ions, a * nPD , b * nPD and c * nPD , where n is the number of amino acid residues in the peptide.