Analytical biochemistry | 2021
Quantification of monosaccharide enantiomers using optical properties of hydrogen-bonded tryptophan.
Abstract
Chiral recognition between amino acids and monosaccharides in the gas phase was investigated as a model for chemical evolution in interstellar molecular clouds. Ultraviolet (UV) photodissociation spectra and product ion spectra of cold gas-phase hydrogen-bonded clusters of protonated tryptophan (Trp) and a pentose, including ribose and arabinose, were obtained using a tandem mass spectrometer equipped with an electrospray ionization source and a temperature-controlled ion trap. The relative intensity of the signal arising from the S1-S0 transition of protonated Trp observed at approximately 285 nm in the UV photodissociation spectrum of homochiral H+(d-Trp)(d-ribose) was significantly higher than that of heterochiral H+(l-Trp)(d-ribose), corresponding to the ππ* state of the Trp indole ring. Optical properties of Trp in the clusters induced by 285-nm photoexcitation were applied to the identification and quantification of pentose enantiomers in solution. Pentose enantiomeric excess in solution was determined from relative abundances observed in a single product ion spectrum of 285-nm photoexcited hydrogen-bonded clusters of H+(l-Trp) and pentose. A mixture of two pentoses could also be quantified by this method. The geometric and electronic structures of Trp enable recognition of biological molecules through hydrogen bonding.