Charge partitioning
during the dissociation of protein complexes
in the gas phase is influenced by many factors, such as interfacial
interactions, protein flexibility, protein conformation, and dissociation
methods. In the present work, two cysteine-containing homodimer proteins,
β-lactoglobulin and α-lactalbumin, with the disulfide
bonds intact and reduced, were used to gain insight into the charge
partitioning behaviors of collision-induced dissociation (CID) and
surface-induced dissociation (SID) processes. For these proteins,
we find that restructuring dominates with CID and dissociation with
symmetric charge partitioning dominates with SID, regardless of whether
intramolecular disulfide bonds are oxidized or reduced. CID of the
charge-reduced dimeric protein complex leads to a precursor with a
slightly smaller collision cross section (CCS), greater stability,
and more symmetrically distributed charges than the significantly
expanded form produced by CID of the higher charged dimer. Collision-induced
unfolding plots demonstrate that the unfolding–restructuring
of the protein complexes initiates the charge migration of higher
charge-state precursors. Overall, gas collisions reveal the charge-dependent
restructuring/unfolding properties of the protein precursor, while
surface collisions lead predominantly to more charge-symmetric monomer
separation. CID’s multiple low-energy collisions sequentially
reorganize intra- and intermolecular bonds, while SID’s large-step
energy jump cleaves intermolecular interfacial bonds in preference
to reorganizing intramolecular bonds. The activated population of
precursors that have taken on energy without dissociating (populated
in CID over a wide range of collision energies, populated in SID for
only a narrow distribution of collision energies near the onset of
dissociation) is expected to be restructured, regardless of the activation
method.