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Investigation of c ions formed by N-terminally charged peptides upon collision-induced dissociation.

Peptide fragments such as b and y sequence ions generated upon low-energy collision-induced dissociation have been routinely used for tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS)-based peptide/protein identification. The underlying formation mechanisms have been studied extensively and described within the literature. As a result, the 'mobile proton model' and 'pathways in competition model' have been built to interpret a majority of peptide fragmentation behavior. However, unusual peptide fragments which involve unfamiliar fragmentation pathways or various rearrangement reactions occasionally appear in MS/MS spectra, resulting in confused MS/MS interpretations. In this work, a series of unfamiliar c ions are detected in MS/MS spectra of the model peptides having an N-terminal Arg or deuterohemin group upon low-energy collision-induced dissociation process. Both the protonated Arg and deuterohemin group play an important role in retention of a positive charge at the N-terminus that is remote from the cleavage sites. According to previous reports and our studies involving amino acid substitutions and hydrogen-deuterium exchange, we propose a McLafferty-type rearrangement via charge-remote fragmentation as the potential mechanism to explain the formation of c ions from precursor peptide ions or unconventional b ions. Density functional theory calculations are also employed in order to elucidate the proposed fragmentation mechanisms. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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