We investigated the interaction between a thiol protease
inhibitor, cystatin, and its target enzyme, papain, by
hydrogen–deuterium (H/D) exchange in conjunction with
successive analysis by collision-induced dissociation (CID)
in an rf-only hexapole ion guide with electrospray ionization-Fourier
transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI-FTICR MS).
The deuterium incorporation into backbone amide hydrogens of
cystatin was analyzed at different time points in the presence or
absence of papain, examining the mass of each fragment produced by
hexapole-CID. In the absence of papain, amide hydrogens in short
amino-terminal fragments, such as b102+
and b122+, were highly deuterated within 1 min.
Although fewer fragments were observed for the cystatin-papain
complex in the hexapole-CID spectra, significant reductions
in initial deuterium content were recognized throughout the
sequence of cystatin. This suggests that complex formation
restricted the flexibility of the whole cystatin molecule.
Detailed analyses revealed that a marked reduction in deuterium
content in the region of residues 1–10 persisted
for hours, suggesting that the flexible N-terminal region
was tightly fixed in the binding pocket with hydrogen bonds.
Our results are consistent with those of previous studies
on the structure and inhibition mechanism of cystatin.
We demonstrated here that enzyme-inhibitor interactions
can be characterized by H/D exchange in combination with
CID in a hexapole ion guide using ESI-FTICR MS rapidly
and using only a small amount of sample.