Distinguishing Isomeric Cyclobutane Thymidine Dimers by Ion Mobility and Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Hsin Chieh Yang, Savannah S. Scruggs, Mengqi Chai, George Mathai, John-Stephen Taylor, Michael L. Gross

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Irradiation of the major conformation of duplex DNA found in cells (B form) produces cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) from adjacent pyrimidines in a head-to-head orientation (syn) with the C5 substituents in a cis stereochemistry. These CPDs have crucial implications in skin cancer. Irradiation of G-quadruplexes and other non-B DNA conformations in vitro produces, however, CPDs between nonadjacent pyrimidines in nearby loops with syn and head-to-tail orientations (anti) with both cis and trans stereochemistry to yield a mixture of six possible isomers of the T=T dimer. This outcome is further complicated by formation of mixtures of nonadjacent CPDs of C=T, T=C, and C=C, and successful analysis depends on development of specific and sensitive methods. Toward meeting this need, we investigated whether ion mobility mass spectrometry (IMMS) and MS/MS can distinguish the cis,syn and trans,anti T=T CPDs. Ion mobility can afford baseline separation and give relative mobilities that are in accord with predicted cross sections. Complementing this ability to distinguish isomers is MS/MS collisional activation where fragmentation also distinguishes the two isomers and confirms conclusions drawn from ion mobility analysis. The observations offer early support that ion mobility and MS/MS can enable the distinction of DNA photoproduct isomers.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1768-1774
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
Volume35
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 7 2024

Keywords

  • Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers
  • density functional theory
  • DNA photoproduct
  • energy-resolved spectra
  • ion mobility mass spectrometry
  • ion-neutral complex
  • isomeric oligonucleotides
  • oligonucleotide adducts
  • tandem mass spectrometry

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