The structure and reactivity of gas-phase complexes of tryptophan (Trp) with Na+, K+, and Ca2+ were examined by high-energy collision-activated dissociation (CAD) and electron transfer dissociation (ETD) using alkali metal targets. In the CAD spectra of M(+)Trp (M = Na and K), neutral Trp loss was the primary dissociation pathway, and the product ion of collision-induced intracomplex electron transfer from the indole pi ring of Trp to the alkali metal ion was observed, indicating a charge-solvated structure in which Trp is non-zwitterionic. The NH3 loss observed in the CAD spectrum of Ca(2+)Trp(2) is ascribed to a CZ (mixed charge-solvated/zwitterionic)-type structure, in which one Trp is non-zwitterionic and the other Trp adopts a zwitterionic structure with an NH3+ moiety. The H atom and NH3 losses observed in the ETD spectrum of Ca(2+)Trp(2) indicate the formation of a hypervalent radical in the complex, R-NH3, via electron transfer from the alkali metal target to the NH3+ group of the CZ-type structure. Ca2+ attachment to Trp cluster induces the zwitterionic structure of Trp in the gas phase, and an electron transfer to the zwitterionic Trp forms the hypervalent radical as a reaction intermediate.