Electron capture dissociation (ECD) has become an alternative method to collision-activated dissociation (CAD) to avoid gas-phase cleavage of post-translational modifications carried by side chains from the peptide backbone. Nonetheless, as illustrated herein by the study of O-glycosylated and O-phosphorylated peptides, the extent of ECD fragmentations may be insufficient to cover the entire peptide sequence and to localize accurately these modifications. The present work demonstrates that the derivatization of peptides at their N-terminus by a phosphonium group improves dramatically and systematically the sequence coverage deduced from the ECD spectrum for both O-glycosylated and O-phosphorylated peptides compared with their native counterparts. The exclusive presence of N-terminal fragments (c-type ions) in the ECD spectra of doubly charged molecular cations simplifies peptide sequence interpretation. Thus, the combination of ECD and fixed charge derivatization appears as an efficient analytical tool for the extensive sequencing of peptides bearing labile groups. (J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 2007, 18, 1405-1413) © 2007 American Society for Mass Spectrometry T he field of proteomics usually aims at differential characterization of the complete pattern of protein expression, for instance between cells in a normal state and those in a pathological state. Protein identification is now routinely achieved on a large scale (tens or hundreds of proteins per day) by combining enzymatic digestion, mass spectrometric analysis of the resulting peptides, and subsequent database search. If few peptides or short peptide sequences are sufficient for protein identifications into databases, a complete determination of the primary structure is nevertheless useful to detect modifications that can be involved in the regulation of protein function. Indeed, the catalytic property, the conformation, the turnover, or the subcellular localization of proteins are largely under the control of various peptide sequence processings named posttranslational modifications. These modifications (PTM) involve the proteolytic maturation of the proteins and/or the transfer of chemical groups (phosphorylation, glycosylation, acetylation, sumoylation) on specific amino-acids (serine, threonine, or tyrosine for O-phosphorylations, serine or threonine for Oglycosylations, asparagine for N-glycosylations). The most obvious strategy for mapping the modifications along the peptide chain involves a comparison between the sequence obtained by mass spectrometric data and the one deduced from the open reading frame coded by the gene sequence. However, a drawback arises from the propensity of groups conjugated to the amino acid side chains to dissociate readily upon collisional activation. For instance, collisionally-activated dissociation (CAD) MS/MS spectra of protonated precursor ions of phosphorylated peptides exhibit intense ions originating from the elimination of metaphosphoric (HPO 3 , loss of 80 Da) or orthophosphoric acid (H 3 PO 4 , loss of 98 Da) [1]. I...