Mu Xiaoyan, Lau Justin Kai-Chi, Lai Cheuk-Kuen, Siu K W Michael, Hopkinson Alan C, Chu Ivan K
Department of Chemistry, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Department of Chemistry and Centre for Research in Mass Spectrometry, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto ON, M3J 1P3, Canada.
Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2016 Apr 28;18(16):11168-75. doi: 10.1039/c6cp00405a.
Peptide radical cations that contain an aromatic amino acid residue cleave to give [zn - H]˙⁺ ions with [b2 - H - 17]˙⁺ and c1 - 17 ions, the dominant products in the dissociation of [zn - H]˙⁺, also present in lower abundance in the CID spectra. Isotopic labeling in the aromatic ring of Yπ˙GG establishes that in the formation of [b2 - H - 17]˙⁺ ions a hydrogen from the δ-position of the Y residue is lost, indicating that nucleophilic substitution on the aromatic ring has occurred. A preliminary DFT investigation of nine plausible structures for the c1 - 17 ion derived from Y(π)˙GG shows that two structures resulting from attack on the aromatic ring by oxygen and nitrogen atoms from the peptide backbone have significantly better energies than other isomers. A detailed study of Y(π)˙GG using two density functionals, B3LYP and M06-2X, with a 6-31++G(d,p) basis set gives a higher barrier for attack on the aromatic ring of the [zn - H]˙⁺ ion by nitrogen than by the carbonyl oxygen. However, subsequent rearrangements involving proton transfers are much higher in energy for the oxygen-substituted isomer leading to the conclusion that the c1 - 17 ions are the products of nucleophilic attack by nitrogen, protonated 2,7-dihydroxyquinoline ions. The [b2 - H - 17]˙⁺ ions are formed by loss of glycine from the same intermediates involved in the formation of the c1 - 17 ions.