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Analysis of Combinatorial Libraries
Combinatorial libraries present a particularly challenging problem in mixture separation. The presence of sequence-, structural-, and stereoisomers at the same mass-to-charge ratio prevents complete characterization of a complicated system by mass spectrometry alone.
This problem is made tractable by ion mobility methods because of the differences in gas phase conformations that arise from the primary sequence or structure of isobaric components.
Our laboratory has recently demonstrated the ability to resolve isomeric species from 676-component libraries of tripeptides using an ion mobility/time-of-flight approach (see the
Instrumentation section for more details on the experimental apparatus).
Once a combinatorial library has been analyzed for completeness, it can be used
in binding affinity studies. We are currently using ion mobility/time-of-flight
methods to investigate the binding affinities of synthetic library components for a specific target molecule. The general approach is diagrammed below, using
a cartoon representation.
Relevant
Publications:
Srebalus Barnes, C. A.;
Clemmer, D. E. Assessment of
Purity and Screening of Peptide Libraries by Nested Ion Mobility-TOFMS:
Identification of RNase S-protein Binders, Anal. Chem.
2001, 73, 424-433.
Srebalus, C. A.; Li, J.; Marshall, W. S.; Clemmer, D. E. Determining Synthetic Failures in Combinatorial Libraries by Hybrid Gas-Phase Separation Methods, J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 2000, 11, 352-355.
Srebalus, C. A.; Li, J.; Marshall, W. S.; Clemmer, D. E. Gas-Phase Separations of Electrosprayed Peptide Libraries, Anal. Chem. 1999, 71, 3918-3927.
Last modified: October 23, 2006