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1.
Li Y  Yan B  Deng C  Yu W  Xu X  Yang P  Zhang X 《Proteomics》2007,7(14):2330-2339
An easily replaceable enzymatic microreactor has been fabricated based on the glass microchip with trypsin-immobilized magnetic silica microspheres (MS microspheres). Magnetic microspheres with small size (approximately 300 nm in diameter) and high magnetic responsivity to magnetic field (68.2 emu/g) were synthesized and modified with tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS). Aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES) and glutaraldehyde (GA) were then introduced to functionalize the MS microspheres for enzyme immobilization. Trypsin was stably immobilized onto the MS microspheres through the reaction of primary amines of the proteins with aldehyde groups on the MS microspheres. The trypsin-immobilized MS microspheres were then locally packed into the microchannel by the application of a strong field magnet to form an on-chip enzymatic microreactor. The digestion efficiency and reproducibility of the microreactor were demonstrated by using cytochrome c (Cyt-C) as a model protein. When compared with an incubation time of 12 h by free trypsin in the conventional digestion approach, proteins can be digested by the on-chip microreactor in several minutes. This microreactor was also successfully applied to the analysis of an RPLC fraction of the rat liver extract. This opens a route for its further application in top-down proteomic analysis.  相似文献   

2.
An easily replaceable and regenerable protease microreactor with metal-ion chelated adsorption of enzyme has been fabricated on chip. Magnetic microspheres with small size (approximately 200 nm in diameter) and strong magnetism were synthesized and were modified with tetraethyl orthosilicate. The metal chelating agent of iminodiacetic acid was then reacted with glycidoxypropyltrimethoxysilane before its immobilization onto the surface of magnetic silica microspheres (MS microspheres). The metal ion of copper and enzyme were subsequently adsorbed onto the surface. The prepared MS microspheres were then locally packed into the microchannel by the application of a strong magnetic field using a magnet to form an on-chip enzymatic microreactor. Capability of the proteolytic microreactor was demonstrated by cytochrome c and bovine serum albumin as model proteins. The digestion products were characterized using MALDI-TOF/TOF MS with sequence coverage of 77% and 21% observed, respectively. This microreactor was also applied to the analysis of one RPLC fraction of rat liver extract. After a database search, 23 unique peptides corresponding to 7 proteins were identified when one RPLC fraction of rat liver extract was digested by the microreactor. This opens a route for its future application in top-down proteomic analysis.  相似文献   

3.
An enzymatic microreactor with a volume of 470 nL has been prepared by immobilizing trypsin on a 10 cm long reactive porous polymer monolith located in a 100 microm i.d. fused silica capillary. This reactor affords suitable degrees of digestion of proteins even after very short residence times of less than 1 min. The performance is demonstrated with the digestion of eight proteins ranging in molecular mass from 2848 to 77 754. The digests were analyzed using mass spectrometry in two modes: off-line MALDI and in-line nanoelectrospray ionization. The large numbers of identified peptides enable a high degree of sequence coverage and positive identification of the proteins. The extent of sequence coverage decreases as the molecular mass of the digested protein increases.  相似文献   

4.
Immune complexome analysis is a method for identifying and profiling of antigens in circulating immune complexes (CICs); it involves separation of immune complexes from serum, direct tryptic digestion of these complexes, and protein analysis via nano-liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (nano-LC–MS/MS). To improve this method, we initially investigated the effects of two factors—the gradient elution program and nano-LC column type (C18-packed, C8-packed, or packed spray capillary column)—on the numbers of peptides and proteins identified. Longer gradient elution times resulted in higher identification capability throughout the range of 25–400 min. Moreover, the packed spray capillary column supported identification of more peptides and proteins than did any other column. In addition, microwave-assisted digestion was compared with conventional digestion, which involved incubation overnight at 37 °C. Microwave-assisted digestion produced more partially digested peptides than did conventional digestion. However, the percentages of miscleaved peptides in all of the identified peptides in microwave-assisted digestion of immune complexes (a protein mixture) were lower than those in the physical stimulation-assisted digestion of a model protein. Microwave-assisted digestion is slightly inferior to, or as effective as, conventional digestion, but it drastically reduces the digestion time.  相似文献   

5.
Angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory peptides can induce antihypertensive effects after oral administration. By means of an ACE inhibitory peptide database, containing about 500 reported sequences and their IC(50) values, the different proteins in pea and whey were quantitatively evaluated as precursors for ACE inhibitory peptides. This analysis was combined with experimental data from the evolution in ACE inhibitory activity and protein degradation during in vitro gastrointestinal digestion. Pea proteins produced similar in silico scores and were degraded early in the in vitro digestion. High ACE inhibitory activity was observed after the simulated stomach phase and augmented slightly in the simulated small intestine phase. The major whey protein beta-lactoglobulin obtained the highest in silico scores, which corresponded with the fact that degradation of this protein in vitro only occurred from the simulated small intestine phase on and resulted in a 10-fold increase in the ACE inhibitory activity. Whey protein obtained total in silico scores of about 124 ml/mg, compared to 46 ml/mg for pea protein, indicating that whey protein would be a richer source of ACE inhibitory peptides than pea protein. Although beta-lactoglobulin is only partially digested, a higher ACE inhibitory activity was indeed found in the whey (IC(50) = 0.048 mg/ml) compared to the pea digest (IC(50) = 0.076 mg/ml). In silico gastrointestinal digestion of the highest scoring proteins in pea and whey, vicilin and albumin PA2, and beta-lactoglobulin, respectively, directly released a number of potent ACE inhibitory peptides. Several other ACE inhibitory sequences resisted in silico digestion by gastrointestinal proteases. Briefly, the quantitative in silico analysis will facilitate the study of precursor proteins on a large scale and the specific release of bioactive peptides.  相似文献   

6.
Attempts to characterize recombinant integral membrane proteins (IMPs) by mass spectrometry are frequently hindered by several factors including the detergents required for extraction and purification that interferes with analysis, poor solubility, incomplete digestion, and limited identification of the transmembrane domain-spanning peptides. The goal of this study was to examine and develop methods for purification of an IMP that are amenable to downstream digestion of the protein and peptide analysis by mass spectrometry. In this study, we have overexpressed a candidate IMP, the vesicular glutamate transporter 1 (VGLUT1) in Pichia pastoris and examined conditions for the efficient affinity purification, in-solution digestion, and analysis of the protein. Analysis of the intact purified protein without detergent was performed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The purified IMP was digested with trypsin, and the resulting peptides were identified. A method that utilizes differential solubility and ionization properties of hydrophobic and hydrophilic peptides was developed. Large hydrophobic peptides were only detected in solutions containing 50% formic acid. Ionization of hydrophilic peptides was suppressed in formic acid, but they produced a strong signal in 50% acetonitrile. Eighty-seven percent sequence coverage of the protein was obtained with only one large hydrophobic peptide that remained unidentified. The results demonstrate a simple method to purify and digest a recombinant IMP for analysis by mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

7.
Enzymatic digestion of proteins is a key step in protein identification by mass spectrometry (MS). Traditional solution-based protein digestion methods require long incubation times and are limitations for high throughput proteomics research. Recently, solid phase digestion (e.g. trypsin immobilization on solid supports) has become a useful strategy to accelerate the speed of protein digestion and eliminate autodigestion by immobilizing and isolating the enzyme moieties on solid supports. Monolithic media is an attractive support for immobilization of enzymes due to its unique properties that include fast mass transfer, stability in most solvents, and versatility of functional groups on the surfaces of monoliths. We prepared immobilized trypsin monolithic capillaries for on-column protein digestion, analyzed the digested peptides through LC/FTICR tandem MS, and compared peptide mass fingerprinting by MALDI-TOF-MS. To further improve the digestion efficiency for low abundance proteins, we introduced C4 functional groups onto the monolith surfaces to combine on-column protein enrichment and digestion. Compared with immobilized trypsin monolithic capillaries without C4, the immobilized trypsin-C4 monolith showed improved digestion efficiency. A mechanism for increased efficiency from the combination of sample enrichment and on-column digestion is also proposed in this paper. Moreover, we investigated the effects of organic solvent on digestion and detection by comparing the observed digested peptide sequences. Our data demonstrated that all columns showed good tolerance to organic solvents and maintained reproducible enzymatic activity for at least 30 days.  相似文献   

8.
The direct linkage between folded structures of proteins and their function has increased the need for high resolution structures. In addition, there is a need for analytical methods for detecting and locating changes in the folded structures of proteins under a wide variety of conditions. The rates at which hydrogens located at peptide amide linkages undergo isotopic exchange has become the basis for an important method for detecting such structural changes. When detected by mass spectrometry, hydrogen exchange can be used to study dilute solutions of large proteins and protein complexes with very high sensitivity. To locate structural changes, labeled proteins are often digested with acid proteases to form peptides whose hydrogen/deuterium levels are determined by mass spectrometry. This approach is successful only when the protein can be digested rapidly under conditions where isotope exchange is slow. This study describes how columns packed with immobilized pepsin can be used to reduce the digestion time and to provide an effective means for separating the pepsin from the isotopically labeled fragments. These columns are part of an on-line system that facilitates both rapid digestion of low concentrations of protein and concentration of the peptides.  相似文献   

9.
Although differences in protein staining intensity can often be visualized by difference gel electrophoresis, abundant proteins can obscure less abundant proteins, and quantification of post-translational modifications is difficult. We present a protocol for quantifying changes in the abundance of a specific protein or changes in specific modifications of a protein using in-gel stable isotope labeling. In this protocol protein extracts from any source treated under two experimental conditions are resolved in two separate lanes by gel electrophoresis. Parallel gel regions of interest are reacted separately with either light or heavy isotope-labeled reagents, and the gel slices are then combined and digested with proteases. The resulting peptides are then analyzed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) to determine relative abundance of light- and heavy-isotope lysine-containing peptide pairs and analyzed by LC/MS/MS for identification of sequence and modifications. This protocol should take approximately 24-26 h to complete, including the incubation time for proteolytic digestion. Additional time will be needed for data analysis and interpretation.  相似文献   

10.
Despite the high sensitivity and relatively high tolerance for contaminants of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) there is often a need to purify and concentrate the sample solution, especially after in-gel digestion of proteins separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE). A silicon microextraction chip (SMEC) for sample clean-up and trace enrichment of peptides was manufactured and investigated. The microchip structure was used to trap reversed-phase chromatography media (POROS R2 beads) that facilitates sample purification/enrichment of contaminated and dilute samples prior to the MALDI-TOF MS analysis. The validity of the SMEC sample preparation technique was successfully investigated by performing analysis on a 10 nM peptide mixture containing 2 m urea in 0.1 m phosphate-buffered saline with MALDI-TOF MS. It is demonstrated that the microchip sample clean-up and enrichment of peptides can facilitate identification of proteins from 2-DE separations. The microchip structure was also used to trap beads immobilized with trypsin, thereby effectively becoming a microreactor for enzymatic digestion of proteins. This microreactor was used to generate a peptide map from a 100 nM bovine serum albumin sample.  相似文献   

11.
This study describes a new protein digestion protocol in which a variety of detergents can be used to solubilize membrane proteins and facilitate trypsin digestion with higher efficiency. In this protocol, proteins are dissolved in solutions containing various detergents and directly incorporated into a polyacrylamide gel matrix without electrophoresis. Detergents are subsequently eliminated from the gel matrix while proteins are still immobilized in the gel matrix. After in-gel digestion of proteins, LC-MS/MS is used to analyze the extracted peptides for protein identification. The uniqueness of the protocol is that it allows usage of a variety of detergents in the starting solution without interfering with LC-MS/MS analysis. We hereby demonstrate that different detergents, including ionic SDS, non-ionic Triton X-100 and n-octyl beta-d-glucopyranoside, and zwitterionic CHAPS, can be used to achieve maximum solubilization of membrane proteins with minimal interference with LC-MS/MS analysis. Enhanced digestions, i.e. improved number and intensity of detected peptides, are also demonstrated for digestion-resistant proteins such as myoglobin, ubiquitin, and bacteriorhodopsin. An additional advantage of the Tube-Gel digestion protocol is that, even without electrophoresis separation, it allows high throughput analysis of complex protein mixtures when coupled with LC-MS/MS. The protocol was used to analyze a complex membrane protein mixture prepared from prostate cancer cells. The protocol involves only a single digestion and 2.5 h of LC-MS/MS analysis and identified 178 membrane proteins. In comparison, the same membrane fraction was resolved by SDS-PAGE, and 20 gel slices were excised and individually digested and analyzed by LC-MS/MS. The more elaborate effort demanded more than 50 h of LC-MS/MS analysis and identified 268 proteins. The new Tube-Gel digestion protocol is an alternative method for high throughput analysis of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

12.
A method for integrating nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry with a microreactor for on-line digestion and fast peptide mass mapping from dilute protein samples is presented. Fused silica capillaries (i.d. 50 microm, o.d. 360 microm) are employed as the digestion microreactor and the nanoelectrospray emitter by immobilizing trypsin onto the surface of the inner wall of the fused silica capillary tubing. The procedure is demonstrated using solutions of 1pmol/mul angiotensin II, cytochrome c, hemoglobin, and beta-casein. Because the inner walls of the capillaries are modified by covalent chemical bonds, the adsorption of peptides and proteins to the inner walls of the capillaries is suppressed. This procedure was performed with solutions as dilute as 1fmol/mul (1nM) cytochrome c. This method shows generation of tryptic peptides with sequence coverage up to 90% within minutes; trypsin autolysis products are not detected. In addition, the immobilized enzyme can be cleaned easily, enabling the microreactor to be reused for nanoelectrospray.  相似文献   

13.
Primary cultures of chick embryo fibroblasts were used to study ribosomal events in the processing of procollagen. Polyribosomes from radiolabeled cells were subjected to enzyme probe analysis using collagenase and pepsin digestion to assess both the amount of procollagen present on the polyribosomes and the conformation of the molecule. The peptides rendered dialyzable by each enzyme treatment were analyzed for radioactive proline and hydroxyproline. Approximately 30% of the nascent proteins were collagenous. Although some hydroxyproline was dialyzable in the pepsin-treated material, a low ratio of hydroxyproline to proline (0.04) indicated that considerable amounts of noncollagenous proteins were digested. Polyribosomal material, previously treated with pepsin, was digested with purified collagenase. Similarly, collagenase-digested polyribosomes were treated with pepsin. The pepsin pretreatment released noncollagenous protein and served to purify the remaining ribosomally bound pepsin-resistant collagenous protein. Collagenase treatment of the pepsin-resistant ribosomally bound peptides released peptides with a hydroxyproline to proline ratio of 0.65, indicating that considerable hydroxylation of proline occurs on nascent ribosomally bound procollagen. This finding combined with the well documented stabilizing effect of hydroxyproline on the collagen triple helix and the demonstrated resistance of ribosomally bound procollagen to pepsin digestion indicates that the collagen triple helix may well form on the polyribosome.  相似文献   

14.
Finehout EJ  Cantor JR  Lee KH 《Proteomics》2005,5(9):2319-2321
Prior to analysis by mass spectrometry, protein samples are often digested. Maximizing the peptide yield from digestion can increase the number of peptides detected and the confidence in protein identification. To determine the optimal conditions for digestion, the Michaelis-Menten kinetic parameters for Promega sequencing grade modified trypsin were measured over a range of temperatures and pHs. The results indicate that an increase in digestion temperature above 37 degrees C, the temperature traditionally used in digestion methods, could offer an increase in peptides detected.  相似文献   

15.
Proteolysis by sequence-specific proteases is the key step for positive sequencing in proteomic studies integrated with mass spectrometry (MS). The conventional method of in-solution digestion of protein is a time-consuming procedure and has limited sensitivity. In this study, we report a simple and rapid system for the analysis of protein sequence and protein posttranslational modification by multienzymatic reaction in a continuous flow using the enzyme (trypsin, chymotrypsin, or alkaline phosphatase)-immobilized microreactor. The feasibility and performance of the single microreactor and tandem microreactors that were connected by the different microreactors were determined by the digestion of nonphosphoprotein (cytochrome c) and phosphoproteins (β-casein and pepsin A). The single microreactor showed rapid digestion compared with that of in-solution digestions. Multiple digestion by the tandem microreactors showed higher sequence coverage compared with that by in-solution or the single microreactor. Moreover, the tandem microreactor that was made by using the combination of protease-immobilized microreactor and phosphatase-immobilized microreactor showed the capability for phosphorylation site analysis in phosphoproteins without the use of any enrichment strategies or radioisotope labeling techniques. This approach provides a strategy that can be applied to various types of linking microreactor-based multienzymatic reaction systems for proteomic analysis.  相似文献   

16.
Amphipols (APols) are a newly designed and milder class of detergent. They have been used primarily in protein structure analysis for membrane protein trapping and stabilization. We have recently demonstrated that APols can be used as an alternative detergent for proteome extraction and digestion, to achieve a “One-stop” single-tube workflow for proteomics. In this workflow, APols are removed by precipitation after protein digestion without depleting the digested peptides. Here, we took further advantage of this precipitation characteristic of APols to concentrate proteins from diluted samples. In contrast with tryptic peptides, a decrease in pH leads to the unbiased co-precipitation of APols with proteins, including globular hydrophilic proteins. We demonstrated that this precipitation is a combined effect of acid precipitation and the APols’ protein interactions. Also, we have been able to demonstrate that APols-aided protein precipitation works well on diluted samples, such as secretome sample, and provides a rapid method for protein concentration.  相似文献   

17.
We compared detection sensitivity and protein sequence coverage of the adenovirus type 5 proteome achievable by liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectroscopy (LC/MS/MS) using three sample preparation and clean up methods. Tryptic digestion was performed on either purified viral proteins or whole virus, and followed by shotgun sequencing using tandem mass spectrometry for peptide identification. We used a recombinant adenovirus type 5 as a test system. The methods included separation of adenoviral proteins by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography followed by tryptic digestion and analysis by LC/MS/MS. Alternatively, the purified whole virus was digested with trypsin and the peptides separated either by one-dimensional (reversed-phase) or by two-dimensional (cation exchange and reversed-phase) chromatography and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 11 protein species were identified from 154 peptides. All of the major viral proteins were found. In addition, two minor proteins, the 23 kDa viral protease and the late L1 protein, were identified for the first time by chromatography based assays. The 23 kDa viral protease, present at only 10 copies per virus, and representing 0.2% of the protein content of the virus, was detected by the 2D LC/MS/MS analysis of the whole virus digest from a sample containing only 70 fmols of the protein. This demonstrates the high sensitivity and selectivity of the method. The 2D LC/MS/MS analysis of the whole virus digest was also able to detect all viral proteins with copy numbers at or above 10/virus particle, with broad coverage of the amino acid sequences. Coverage ranged from 2 to 54%, a majority between 20 and 35%, suggesting the possibility of using this analysis to assess the purity of the virus preparations. This broad coverage may also provide a useful approach to identify posttranslational modifications on the structural proteins of the adenovirus.  相似文献   

18.
Stable isotope-labeled proteotypic peptides are used as surrogate standards for absolute quantification of proteins in proteomics. However, a stable isotope-labeled peptide has to be synthesized, at relatively high cost, for each protein to be quantified. To multiplex protein quantification, we developed a method in which gene design de novo is used to create and express artificial proteins (QconCATs) comprising a concatenation of proteotypic peptides. This permits absolute quantification of multiple proteins in a single experiment. This complete study was constructed to define the nature, sources of error, and statistical behavior of a QconCAT analysis. The QconCAT protein was designed to contain one tryptic peptide from 20 proteins present in the soluble fraction of chicken skeletal muscle. Optimized DNA sequences encoding these peptides were concatenated and inserted into a vector for high level expression in Escherichia coli. The protein was expressed in a minimal medium containing amino acids selectively labeled with stable isotopes, creating an equimolar series of uniformly labeled proteotypic peptides. The labeled QconCAT protein, purified by affinity chromatography and quantified, was added to a homogenized muscle preparation in a known amount prior to proteolytic digestion with trypsin. As anticipated, the QconCAT was completely digested at a rate far higher than the analyte proteins, confirming the applicability of such artificial proteins for multiplexed quantification. The nature of the technical variance was assessed and compared with the biological variance in a complete study. Alternative ionization and mass spectrometric approaches were investigated, particularly LC-ESI-TOF MS and MALDI-TOF MS, for analysis of proteins and tryptic peptides. QconCATs offer a new and efficient approach to precise and simultaneous absolute quantification of multiple proteins, subproteomes, or even entire proteomes.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of polyamines on the digestion of proteins by serine proteases was examined. Based on the mechanism of action of serine proteases, it was anticipated that nucleophilic functionalities such as amino groups in polyamine, rather than hydroxyl ions, would react with peptide bonds during the hydrolysis process. If this were the case, polyamine might be covalently linked to the C-terminus of the product peptides during protein digestion. In order to test this hypothesis, hemoglobin was used as a model protein and was digested with trypsin in the presence of polyamine. The product peptides were separated, collected by HPLC, and analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS using post-source decay. The results showed that some peptides were indeed modified with polyamine at the C-terminus.  相似文献   

20.
We used a newly developed method combining trypsin-immobilized magnetic nanoparticles (TIMNs) and microwave-assisted protein digestion to study the proteins of human lens tissue. The digested proteins were identified by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. The lens proteins were digested under optimized conditions (digestion time 1 min, microwave power 400 W, trypsin-to-protein ratio 1:5) determined using bovine serum albumin as the standard protein, before liquid-chromatographic and mass-spectrometric analysis. Twenty-six proteins were identified with the new digestion method compared with 11 proteins identified with traditional in-solution digestion (12 h). γ-Crystallin, β-crystallin, and superoxide dismutase 1 proteins, identified with the microwave-assisted method but not the traditional method, are related to cataract development according to some studies. The TIMNs were easily separated from the digestion products. This new digestion method could prove extremely useful for large-scale proteomic analyses.  相似文献   

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