Publications by authors named "Jason Causon"

Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) are crucial and dynamic players in a large variety of cellular processes and signaling. Proteomic technologies have emerged as the method of choice to profile PTMs. However, these analyses remain challenging due to potential low PTM stoichiometry, the presence of multiple PTMs per proteolytic peptide, PTM site localization of isobaric peptides, and neutral losses.

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Accurate reconstruction of metabolic pathways is an important prerequisite for interpreting metabolomics changes and understanding the diverse biological processes in disease models. A tracer-based metabolomics strategy utilizes stable isotope-labeled precursors to resolve complex pathways by tracing the labeled atom(s) to downstream metabolites through enzymatic reactions. Isotope enrichment analysis is informative and achieved by counting total labeled atoms and acquiring the mass isotopologue distribution (MID) of the intact metabolite.

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Time-of-flight MS systems for biopharmaceutical and protein characterization applications may play an even more pivotal role in the future as biotherapeutics increase in drug pipelines and as top-down MS approaches increase in use. Here, a recently developed TOF MS system is examined for monoclonal antibody (mAb) characterization from serum samples. After immunocapture, purified drug material spiked into monkey serum or dosed for an in-life study is analyzed by top-down MS.

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The possibility to record proteomes in high throughput and at high quality has opened new avenues for biomedical research, drug discovery, systems biology, and clinical translation. However, high-throughput proteomic experiments often require high sample amounts and can be less sensitive compared to conventional proteomic experiments. Here, we introduce and benchmark Zeno SWATH MS, a data-independent acquisition technique that employs a linear ion trap pulsing (Zeno trap pulsing) to increase the sensitivity in high-throughput proteomic experiments.

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We report on the dissociation of singly protonated peptides by electrons using electron-activated dissociation (EAD), which comprises electron impact excitation of ions from organics (EIEIO), electronic-excitation dissociation (EED), and electron ionization dissociation (EIoD). Various singly protonated peptides were dissociated using a recently reported fast EAD device. The dissociation can be induced through two pathways: (i) vibrational dissociation similar to collision-activated dissociation (CAD, or collision-induced dissociation, CID) by relaxation from a molecular electronic excited state to high vibrational states; and (ii) radical-induced dissociation where molecular electronic excitation is followed by homolytic cleavage.

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