Characterization of Ultraviolet Photoreactions in Therapeutic Peptides by Femtosecond Laser Catalysis and Mass Spectrometry

ACS Omega. 2019 Aug 23;4(11):14517-14525. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.9b01749. eCollection 2019 Sep 10.

Abstract

Peptides and proteins have diverse ultraviolet (UV) photoreaction pathways that can be activated by the energy of the UV photons absorbed. Simple light sources such as lamps are conventionally used to study these photoreactions in solution. This work provides a proof of concept that femtosecond laser technology can function as a highly potent UV source in rapidly conducting UV photostability studies of peptides. Correspondingly, sufficient quantities of photoproducts were generated in 1 min or less, allowing for identification of known and new photomodifications in the therapeutic peptides somatostatin-14 and arginine vasopressin. Identical photoproducts were also generated with a conventional continuous source. The major modifications included N-formylkynurenine, a cross-link between Trp and Phe, a Tyr product with an NH3 loss, and disruption of an unstable disulfide bond into a complex mixture of a trisulfide bond and multiple scrambled dimeric products. In conclusion, femtosecond lasers are extremely useful to drive fast UV-induced reactions for high throughput screening of photostability and modifications in amino acid polymers.