Bottom-up Histone Post-translational Modification Analysis using Liquid Chromatography, Trapped Ion Mobility Spectrometry, and Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Cassandra N. Fuller,Lílian V. Tose,Francisca N. de L. Vitorino,Natarajan V. Bhanu,Erin Panczyk,Melvin A. Park,Benjamin A. García,Francisco Fernandez‐Lima
The amino acid position within a histone sequence and the chemical nature of post-translational modifications (PTMs) are essential for elucidating the "Histone Code". Previous work has shown that PTMs induce specific biological responses and are good candidates as biomarkers for diagnostics. Here, we evaluate the analytical advantages of trapped ion mobility (TIMS) with parallel accumulation-serial fragmentation (PASEF) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) for bottom-up proteomics of model cancer cells. The study also considered the use of nanoliquid chromatography (LC) and traditional methods: LC-TIMS-PASEF-ToF MS/MS vs nLC-TIMS-PASEF-ToF MS/MS vs nLC-MS/MS. The addition of TIMS and PASEF-MS/MS increased the number of detected peptides due to the added separation dimension. All three methods showed high reproducibility and low RSD in the MS domain (<5 ppm). While the LC, nLC and TIMS separations showed small RSD across samples, the accurate mobility (1/K