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Dive into the research topics where Roman A. Zubarev is active.

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Featured researches published by Roman A. Zubarev.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2000

Automated reduction and interpretation of high resolution electrospray mass spectra of large molecules

David M. Horn; Roman A. Zubarev; Fred W. McLafferty

Here a fully automated computer algorithm is applied to complex mass spectra of peptides and proteins. This method uses a subtractive peak finding routine to locate possible isotopic clusters in the spectrum, subjecting these to a combination of the previous Fourier transform/ Patterson method for primary charge determination and the method for least-squares fitting to a theoretically derived isotopic abundance distribution for m/z determination of the most abundant isotopic peak, and the statistical reliability of this determination. If a predicted protein sequence is available, each such m/z value is checked for assignment as a sequence fragment. A new signal-to-noise calculation procedure has been devised for accurate determination of baseline and noise width for spectra with high peak density. In 2 h, the program identified 824 isotopic clusters representing 581 mass values in the spectrum of a GluC digest of a 191 kDa protein; this is \s>50% more than the number of mass values found by the extremely tedious operator-applied methodology used previously. The program should be generally applicable to classes of large molecules, including DNA and polymers. Thorough high resolution analysis of spectra by Horn (THRASH) is proposed as the program’s verb.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2000

Electron capture dissociation of singly and multiply phosphorylated peptides

Allan Stensballe; Ole Nørregaard Jensen; J. Olsen; Kim F. Haselmann; Roman A. Zubarev

Analysis of phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine containing peptides by nano-electrospray Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometry established electron capture dissociation (ECD) as a viable method for phosphopeptide sequencing. In general, ECD spectra of synthetic and native phosphopeptides appeared less complex than conventional collision activated dissociation (CAD) mass spectra of these species. ECD of multiply protonated phosphopeptide ions generated mainly c- and z(.)-type peptide fragment ion series. No loss of water, phosphate groups or phosphoric acid from intact phosphopeptide ions nor from the c and z(.) fragment ion products was observed in the ECD spectra. ECD enabled complete or near-complete amino acid sequencing of phosphopeptides for the assignment of up to four phosphorylation sites in peptides in the mass range 1400 to 3500 Da. Nano-scale Fe(III)-affinity chromatography combined with nano-electrospray FTMS/ECD facilitated phosphopeptide analysis and amino acid sequencing from crude proteolytic peptide mixtures.


European Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2002

Towards an understanding of the mechanism of electron-capture dissociation: a historical perspective and modern ideas

Roman A. Zubarev; Kim F. Haselmann; Bogdan A. Budnik; Frank Kjeldsen; Frank Jensen

Electron-capture dissociation (ECD) is a new fragmentation technique that utilizes ion–electron recombination reactions. The latter have parallels in other research fields; revealing these parallels helps to understand the ECD mechanism. An overview is given of ECD-related phenomena and of the history of ECD discovery and development. Current views on the ECD mechanism are discussed using both published and new examples.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2001

Electron capture dissociation of gaseous multiply charged ions by fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance

Fred W. McLafferty; David M. Horn; Kathrin Breuker; Ying Ge; Mark A. Lewis; Blas A. Cerda; Roman A. Zubarev; Barry K. Carpenter

Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance instrumentation is uniquely applicable to an unusual new ion chemistry, electron capture dissociation (ECD). This causes nonergodic dissociation of far larger molecules (42 kDa) than previously observed (<1 kDa), with the resulting unimolecular ion chemistry also unique because it involves radical site reactions for similarly larger ions. ECD is highly complementary to the well known energetic methods for multiply charged ion dissociation, providing much more extensive protein sequence information, including the direct identification of N- versus C-terminal fragment ions. Because ECD only excites the molecule near the cleavage site, accompanying rearrangements are minimized. Counterintuitively, cleavage of backbone covalent bonds of protein ions is favored over that of noncovalent bonds; larger (>10 kDa) ions give far more extensive ECD if they are first thermally activated. This high specificity for covalent bond cleavage also makes ECD promising for studying the secondary and tertiary structure of gaseous protein ions caused by noncovalent bonding.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2001

Electron detachment dissociation of peptide di-anions: an electron–hole recombination phenomenon

Bogdan A. Budnik; Kim F. Haselmann; Roman A. Zubarev

A novel electron–ion reaction mimicking positron capture is reported for gas-phase polypeptide di-anions. Bombardment of the latter by >10 eV electrons produced electron detachment followed by backbone dissociation, noticeably cleavage of the N–Cα bond. On the other hand, reaction with hydrogen cations resulted in losses of neutral groups but not in backbone cleavage. It is proposed that the N–Cα dissociation is due to recombination along the peptide chain of a positive radical charge (hole) with a negative charge. The new reaction is likely to find application in mass spectrometry for primary structure determination of acidic polypeptides.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Orbitrap mass spectrometry.

Roman A. Zubarev; Alexander Makarov

Orbitrap is the newest addition to the family of high-resolution mass spectrometry analyzers. With its revolutionarily new, miniature design, Orbitrap combines high speed with excellent quantification properties, ranking favorably in many analytical applications.


Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2000

Low-mass ions observed in plasma desorption mass spectrometry of high explosives

Kristina Håkansson; Ramal V. Coorey; Roman A. Zubarev; Victor L. Talrose; P. Håkansson

The low-mass ions observed in both positive and negative plasma desorption mass spectrometry (PDMS) of the high explosives HMX, RDX, CL-20, NC, PETN and TNT are reported. Possible identities of the most abundant ions are suggested and their presence or absence in the different spectra is related to the properties of the explosives as matrices in PDMS. The detection of abundant NO+ and NO2- ions for HMX, RDX and CL-20, which are efficient matrices, indicates that explosive decomposition takes place in PDMS of these three substances and that a contribution from the corresponding chemical energy release is possible. The observation of abundant C2H4N+ and CH2N+ ions, which have high protonation properties, might also explain the higher protein charge states observed with these matrices. Also, the observation of NO2-, possibly formed by electron scavenging which increases the survival probability of positively charged protein molecular ions, completes the pattern. TNT does not give any of these ions and it is thereby possible to explain why it does not work as a PDMS matrix. For NC and PETN, decomposition does not seem to be as pronounced as for HMX, RDX and CL-20, and also no particularly abundant ions with high protonation properties are observed. The fact that NC works well as a matrix might be related to other properties of this compound, such as its high adsorption ability.


Chemical Physics Letters | 2002

Dissociative capture of hot (3–13 eV) electrons by polypeptide polycations: an efficient process accompanied by secondary fragmentation

Frank Kjeldsen; Kim F. Haselmann; Bogdan A. Budnik; Frank Jensen; Roman A. Zubarev

Dissociative capture of hot (3-13 eV) electrons by polypeptide polycations: an efficient process accompanied by secondary fragmentation


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2007

On the Proper Use of Mass Accuracy in Proteomics

Roman A. Zubarev; Matthias Mann

Mass measurement is the main outcome of mass spectrometry-based proteomics yet the potential of recent advances in accurate mass measurements remains largely unexploited. There is not even a clear definition of mass accuracy in the proteomics literature, and we identify at least three uses of this term: anecdotal mass accuracy, statistical mass accuracy, and the maximum mass deviation (MMD) allowed in a database search. We suggest using the second of these terms as the generic one. To make the best use of the mass precision offered by modern instruments we propose a series of simple steps involving recalibration of the data on “internal standards” contained in every proteomics data set. Each data set should be accompanied by a plot of mass errors from which the appropriate MMD can be chosen. More advanced uses of high mass accuracy include an MMD that depends on the signal abundance of each peptide. Adapting search engines to high mass accuracy in the MS/MS data is also a high priority. Proper use of high mass accuracy data can make MS-based proteomics one of the most “digital” and accurate post-genomics disciplines.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2006

ModifiComb, a New Proteomic Tool for Mapping Substoichiometric Post-translational Modifications, Finding Novel Types of Modifications, and Fingerprinting Complex Protein Mixtures

Mikhail M. Savitski; Michael L. Nielsen; Roman A. Zubarev

A major challenge in proteomics is to fully identify and characterize the post-translational modification (PTM) patterns present at any given time in cells, tissues, and organisms. Here we present a fast and reliable method (“ModifiComb”) for mapping hundreds types of PTMs at a time, including novel and unexpected PTMs. The high mass accuracy of Fourier transform mass spectrometry provides in many cases unique elemental composition of the PTM through the difference ΔM between the molecular masses of the modified and unmodified peptides, whereas the retention time difference ΔRT between their elution in reversed-phase liquid chromatography provides an additional dimension for PTM identification. Abundant sequence information obtained with complementary fragmentation techniques using ion-neutral collisions and electron capture often locates the modification to a single residue. The (ΔM, ΔRT) maps are representative of the proteome and its overall modification state and may be used for database-independent organism identification, comparative proteomic studies, and biomarker discovery. Examples of newly found modifications include +12.000 Da (+C atom) incorporation into proline residues of peptides from proline-rich proteins found in human saliva. This modification is hypothesized to increase the known activity of the peptide.

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Frank Kjeldsen

University of Southern Denmark

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Bogdan A. Budnik

University of Southern Denmark

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