Karty Jonathan A, Ireland Marcia M E, Brun Yves V, Reilly James P
Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington 47405, USA.
J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2002 Dec 25;782(1-2):363-83. doi: 10.1016/s1570-0232(02)00550-0.
In peptide mass mapping of isolated proteins, a significant number of the observed mass spectral peaks are often uninterpreted. These peaks derive from a number of sources: errors in the genome that give rise to incorrect peptide mass predictions, undocumented post-translational modifications, sample handling-induced modifications, contaminants in the sample, non-standard protein cleavage sites, and non-protein components of the sample. In a study of the stalk organelle of Caulobacter crescentus, roughly one-third (782/2215) of all observed masses could not be assigned to the proteins identified in the gel spots (Karty et al., J. Proteome Res., 1 (2002) 325). By interpreting these masses, this work illuminates a number of phenomena that may arise in the course of peptide mass mapping of electrophoretically separated proteins and presents results from a number of related studies.