A very high pressure liquid chromatography (VHPLC) system was constructed by modifying a commercially available pump in order to achieve pressures in excess of 1,200 bar (17,500 psi). A computer-controlled low-pressure mixer was used to generate solvent gradients. Protein digests were rapidly analyzed by reversed-phase VHPLC with linear solvent gradients coupled to either a tandem mass spectrometer using electrospray ionization or a UV/visible detector. The separations were performed at pressures ranging from 790 (11,500 psi) to 930 bar (13,500 psi) in 22-cm-long capillary columns packed with C18-modified 1.5-microm nonporous silica particles. A digest of bovine serum albumin (BSA) was analyzed by the VHPLC system connected to a mass spectrometer in MS mode. An analysis of 12.5 fmol of sample gave signal-to-noise ratios of tryptic peaks greater than 10:1 in the base peak plot mass chromatogram. This system was also used to analyze a proteolytic digest of a rat liver protein excised from a 2-D gel separation of a liver tissue lysate. For this analysis, the mass spectrometer was set up to perform data-dependent scanning (automated switching from MS mode to MS/MS mode when a peak was detected) for peptide sequencing and protein identification by database searching. The results of this analysis are compared to an analysis performed on the same sample using the nanoelectrospray-MS/MS technique. Though both techniques were able to identify the unknown protein, the VHPLC method gave twice as many sequenced peptides as nanoelectrospray and improved the signal-to-noise ratio of the spectra by at least a factor of 10. Direct comparisons with nanoelectrospray for MS and MS/MS data acquisition from a BSA digest were made. These comparisons show enhancements of greater than 20-fold for VHPLC over nanoelectrospray. In addition, the VHPLC/MS/MS data acquisition was accomplished in an automated manner.
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