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1.
Lee YH  Kim MS  Choie WS  Min HK  Lee SW 《Proteomics》2004,4(6):1684-1694
Recently, various chemical modifications of peptides have been incorporated into mass spectrometric analyses of proteome samples, predominantly in conjunction with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI MS), to facilitate de novo sequencing of peptides. In this work, we investigate systematically the utility of N-terminal sulfonation of tryptic peptides by 4-sulfophenyl isothiocyanate (SPITC) for proteome analysis by capillary reverse-phase liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (cRPLC/MS/MS). The experimental conditions for the sulfonation were carefully adjusted so that SPITC reacts selectively with the N-terminal amino groups, even in the presence of the epsilon-amino groups of lysine residues. Mass spectrometric analyses of the modified peptides by cRPLC/MS/MS indicated that SPITC derivatization proceeded toward near completion under the experimental conditions employed here. The SPITC-derivatized peptides underwent facile fragmentation, predominantly resulting in y-series ions in the MS/MS spectra. Combining SPITC derivatization and cRPLC/MS/MS analyses facilitated the acquisition of sequence information for lysine-terminated tryptic peptides as well as arginine-terminated peptides without the need for additional peptide pretreatment, such as guanidination of lysine amino group. This process alleviated the biased detection of arginine-terminated peptides that is often observed in MALDI MS experiments. We will discuss the utility of the technique as a viable method for proteome analyses and present examples of its application in analyzing samples having different levels of complexity.  相似文献   

2.
Automated multidimensional capillary liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) has been increasingly applied in various large scale proteome profiling efforts. However, comprehensive global proteome analysis remains technically challenging due to issues associated with sample complexity and dynamic range of protein abundances, which is particularly apparent in mammalian biological systems. We report here the application of a high efficiency cysteinyl peptide enrichment (CPE) approach to the global proteome analysis of human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs) which significantly improved both sequence coverage of protein identifications and the overall proteome coverage. The cysteinyl peptides were specifically enriched by using a thiol-specific covalent resin, fractionated by strong cation exchange chromatography, and subsequently analyzed by reversed-phase capillary LC-MS/MS. An HMEC tryptic digest without CPE was also fractionated and analyzed under the same conditions for comparison. The combined analyses of HMEC tryptic digests with and without CPE resulted in a total of 14 416 confidently identified peptides covering 4294 different proteins with an estimated 10% gene coverage of the human genome. By using the high efficiency CPE, an additional 1096 relatively low abundance proteins were identified, resulting in 34.3% increase in proteome coverage; 1390 proteins were observed with increased sequence coverage. Comparative protein distribution analyses revealed that the CPE method is not biased with regard to protein M(r) , pI, cellular location, or biological functions. These results demonstrate that the use of the CPE approach provides improved efficiency in comprehensive proteome-wide analyses of highly complex mammalian biological systems.  相似文献   

3.
This paper reports on studies directed to the characterization of the proteome of human plasma by the shotgun sequencing approach, namely the use of HPLC coupled to mass spectrometry (MS). The report will present data from two laboratories that allows the comparison of peptide and protein identifications by either accurate mass measurement on a Fourier transform mass spectrometry or MS/MS fragmentation on an ion trap mass spectrometer. Because the dynamic range of the protein components of plasma is one of the largest for a biological sample, the analysis of such a challenging sample was aided by the use of these two MS approaches. The major classes of proteins observed were transport proteins, enzymes, and enzyme inhibitors, blood-clotting factors, membrane-associated proteins including soluble forms of receptors, hormones, immunoglobulins, and other glycoproteins. The protein identifications were also highly consistent with results obtained from 2D gel studies, although a larger number of additional proteins were observed with the shotgun sequencing approach. The quantitation of low to medium level proteins was explored in the ion trap with an add-back of a known amount of human growth hormone (hGH) at a clinically relevant level (5 ug/L). The isotope coded affinity tag (ICAT) approach was used to quantitate successfully different levels of hGH in replicate analysis via the disulfide linked tryptic peptide (T6-T16). These studies suggest that the shotgun sequencing approach can be used to characterize part of the plasma proteome and serve as a starting point for the use of multidimensional analytical approaches for the analysis of complex biological samples.  相似文献   

4.
Modified peptides constitute a sub-population among the tryptic peptides analyzed in LC–MS based shotgun proteomics experiments. For larger proteomes including the human proteome, the tryptic peptide pool is very large, which necessitates some form of sample fractionation. By carefully choosing the sample fractionation and separation methods applied as shown here for the combination of narrow-range immobilized pH gradient isoelectric focusing (IPG-IEF) and nanoUPLC–MS, significantly increased information content can be achieved. Relatively low standard deviations were obtained for such multidimensional separations in terms of peptide pI (<0.05 pI units) and retention time (<0.3 min for a 350 min gradient) for a selection of highly complex proteomics samples. Using narrow-range IPG-IEF, experimental and predicted pI were in relative good agreement. However, based on our data, retention time prediction algorithms need further improvements in accuracy to match state-of-the-art reversed-phase chromatography performance. General trends of peptide pI shifts induced by common modifications including deamidations and N-terminal modifications are described. Deamidations of glutamine and asparagines shift peptide pI by approximately 1.5 pI units, making the peptides more acidic. Additionally, a novel pI shift (+~0.4 pI units) was found associated with dethiomethyl Met modifications. Further, the effects of these modifications as well as methionine oxidation were investigated in terms of experimentally observed retention time shifts in the chromatographic separation step. Clearly, post-translational modification-induced influences on peptide pI and retention time can be accurately and reproducibly measured using narrow-range IPG-IEF and high-performance nanoLC–MS. Even at modest mass accuracy (±50 ppm), the inclusion of peptide pI (±0.2 pI units) and/or retention time (±20 min) criteria are highly informative for human proteome analyses. The applications of using this information to identify post-translationally modified peptides and improve data analysis workflows are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
This paper describes the profiling of human growth hormone (hGH) in human plasma in order to assess the dynamic range of the ion-trap mass spectrometer for proteomic studies of complex biological samples. Human growth hormone is an example of a low-level plasma protein in vivo, present at subfemtomole levels. This study was performed on a plasma sample in which hGH has been spiked at 10-fold above the natural level, that is approximately 16 pg/microL of plasma. Initially, the measurement was carried out without any sample enrichment and consisted of the following steps: the full set of plasma proteins were reduced, alkylated, and digested with trypsin, and the resulting peptides were separated on a capillary C-18 column and then detected by ion-trap mass spectrometry (1D LC/MS). In addition, this study provided a global view of the serum proteome with over 200 plasma proteins being preliminarily identified. In the MS/MS analysis, hGH was detected by characterization of the first tryptic peptide (T1). The initial identification was confirmed by alternative approaches, which also allowed the evaluation of different sample purification protocols. First, the plasma sample containing hGH was fractionated on a reversed-phase HPLC column and digested, and hGH could now be identified by MS/MS measurements of two tryptic peptides (T1 and T4) by the same 1D LC/MS protocol. In addition, the assignment of peptide identity was made with higher certainty (as measured by an algorithm score). The plasma sample was also fractionated by 1D and 2D gel electrophoresis, the selected bands were digested and analyzed again by the 1D LC/MS protocol. In both cases using the gel prepurifications, hGH was identified with additional peptides. Finally, the plasma sample was analyzed by 2D chromatography (ion exchange and reversed phase) on a new instrumental platform (ProteomeX), and hGH was identified by the observation of five tryptic peptides. In conclusion, these experiments were able to detect growth hormone in the low femtomole level with a dynamic range of 1 in 40 000 by several independent approaches. The amount of growth hormone, while 10-fold above normal in vivo levels, represents concentrations that may be present in disease states (such as acromegaly) and also in doping control measurements. These studies have demonstrated that shotgun sequencing approaches (LC/MS/MS) not only can profile high-abundance proteins in complex biological fluids but also have the potential to identify and quantitate low-level proteins present in such complex mixtures without extensive prepurification protocols. A key to such studies, however, is to use targeted approaches that reduce the complexity of the solute mixture that is presented to the mass spectrometer at a given time point. The various sample preparation protocols described here all improved the quality of the hGH measurement, although in this study the 2D chromatographic approach gave the greatest sequence coverage.  相似文献   

6.
Analysis of the sequence and nature of protein N termini has many applications. Defining the termini of proteins for proteome annotation in the Human Proteome Project is of increasing importance. Terminomics analysis of protease cleavage sites in degradomics for substrate discovery is a key new application. Here we describe the step-by-step procedures for performing terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates (TAILS), a 2- to 3-d (depending on method of labeling) high-throughput method to identify and distinguish protease-generated neo-N termini from mature protein N termini with all natural modifications with high confidence. TAILS uses negative selection to enrich for all N-terminal peptides and uses primary amine labeling-based quantification as the discriminating factor. Labeling is versatile and suited to many applications, including biochemical and cell culture analyses in vitro; in vivo analyses using tissue samples from animal and human sources can also be readily performed. At the protein level, N-terminal and lysine amines are blocked by dimethylation (formaldehyde/sodium cyanoborohydride) and isotopically labeled by incorporating heavy and light dimethylation reagents or stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture labels. Alternatively, easy multiplex sample analysis can be achieved using amine blocking and labeling with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification, also known as iTRAQ. After tryptic digestion, N-terminal peptide separation is achieved using a high-molecular-weight dendritic polyglycerol aldehyde polymer that binds internal tryptic and C-terminal peptides that now have N-terminal alpha amines. The unbound naturally blocked (acetylation, cyclization, methylation and so on) or labeled mature N-terminal and neo-N-terminal peptides are recovered by ultrafiltration and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Hierarchical substrate winnowing discriminates substrates from the background proteolysis products and non-cleaved proteins by peptide isotope quantification and bioinformatics search criteria.  相似文献   

7.
Formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded (FFPE) tissue is considered as an appropriate alternative to frozen/fresh tissue for proteomic analysis. Here we study formalin‐induced alternations on a proteome‐wide level. We compared LC‐MS/MS data of FFPE and frozen human kidney tissues by two methods. First, clustering analysis revealed that the biological variation is higher than the variation introduced by the two sample processing techniques and clusters formed in accordance with the biological tissue origin and not with the sample preservation method. Second, we combined open modification search and spectral counting to find modifications that are more abundant in FFPE samples compared to frozen samples. This analysis revealed lysine methylation (+14 Da) as the most frequent modification induced by FFPE preservation. We also detected a slight increase in methylene (+12 Da) and methylol (+30 Da) adducts as well as a putative modification of +58 Da, but they contribute less to the overall modification count. Subsequent SEQUEST analysis and X!Tandem searches of different datasets confirmed these trends. However, the modifications due to FFPE sample processing are a minor disturbance affecting 2–6% of all peptide‐spectrum matches and the peptides lists identified in FFPE and frozen tissues are still highly similar.  相似文献   

8.
Methods for on-chip protein analysis   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The unambiguous identification of peptides/proteins is crucial for the definition of the proteome. Using ProteinChip Array technology also known as surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS), we developed experimental protocols and probed test conditions required for the protein identification on ProteinChip surfaces. We were able to directly digest peptides/proteins on-chip surfaces by specific proteases, such as trypsin, and to obtain the peptide mass fingerprint of the sample under investigation by its direct analysis on a simple laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometer. Furthermore, tandem mass spectrometry was performed on several of the resulting tryptic peptides by using collision quadrupole time of flight (Qq-TOF) MS/MS via the ProteinChip interface, thus allowing the unambiguous identification of the protein(s) within the sample. In addition, we were able to identify the C-terminal sequence of peptides by their digestion with carboxypeptidase Y directly on ProteinChip surfaces coupled with SELDI-TOF MS analysis of the resulting peptide mass ladders employing the instrument's protein ladder sequence software. Moreover, the removal of up to nine amino acid residues from the C-terminal end of a peptide extends the functional range of Qq-TOF MS/MS sequence determination to over 3000 m/z. The utility of these procedures for the proteome exploration are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
It is expected that the composition of the serum proteome can provide valuable information about the state of the human body in health and disease and that this information can be extracted via quantitative proteomic measurements. Suitable proteomic techniques need to be sensitive, reproducible, and robust to detect potential biomarkers below the level of highly expressed proteins, generate data sets that are comparable between experiments and laboratories, and have high throughput to support statistical studies. Here we report a method for high throughput quantitative analysis of serum proteins. It consists of the selective isolation of peptides that are N-linked glycosylated in the intact protein, the analysis of these now deglycosylated peptides by liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, and the comparative analysis of the resulting patterns. By focusing selectively on a few formerly N-linked glycopeptides per serum protein, the complexity of the analyte sample is significantly reduced and the sensitivity and throughput of serum proteome analysis are increased compared with the analysis of total tryptic peptides from unfractionated samples. We provide data that document the performance of the method and show that sera from untreated normal mice and genetically identical mice with carcinogen-induced skin cancer can be unambiguously discriminated using unsupervised clustering of the resulting peptide patterns. We further identify, by tandem mass spectrometry, some of the peptides that were consistently elevated in cancer mice compared with their control littermates.  相似文献   

10.
We have developed a real-time graphic-processor-unit-based search engine capable of high-quality peptide identifications in <500 μs per spectrum. The steps of peptide/protein identification, in-silico prediction of all possible tryptic peptides from these proteins, and the prediction of their expected retention times and m/z values take less than 5 s per cycle over ~3000 MS/MS spectra. This lays the foundation for information-dependent acquisition with exclusion lists generated on-the-fly, as the instrument continues to acquire data. While a complete evaluation of the dynamic exclusion system requires the participation from instrument vendors, we conducted a series of model experiments using a whole cell tryptic digestion of the bacterium Clostridium thermocellum. We ran a series of five iterative LC-MS/MS runs, adding a new exclusion list at each of four chromatographic "tripping points" - the elution times of the four standard peptides spiked into the sample. Retention times of these standard peptides were also used for real-time "chromatographic calibration." The dynamic exclusion approach gave a ≈ 5% increase in confident protein identification (for typical 2 h LC-MS/MS run), and reduced the average number of identified peptides per protein from 4.7 to 2.9. Its application to a two-times shorter gradient gave a ≈ 17% increase in proteins identified. Further improvements are possible for instruments with better mass accuracy, by employing a more accurate retention prediction algorithm and by developing better understanding of the possible chemical modifications and fragmentations produced during electrospray ionization.  相似文献   

11.
Mass spectrometric techniques for identification of proteins by "mass fingerprinting" (matching the masses of tryptic peptides from a protein digest to the theoretical peptides in a database) such as matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) are rapidly growing in popularity as the demand for high throughput analysis of the proteome increases. This is due, in part, to the ability to automate the technique and the rapid rate with which mass spectra may be acquired. An important factor in the accuracy of the technique is the number of tryptic peptides that are identified in the various searching algorithms that exist. The greater sequence coverage of the parent protein that is obtained, the higher the level of confidence in the identification that is determined. One impediment to high levels of sequence coverage is the bias of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry to arginine-containing peptides. Increasing the sensitivity to lysine-containing peptides should increase the sequence coverage obtained. In order to achieve this result we have developed conditions to modify the epsilon-amine group of lysine in tryptic peptides with O-methylisourea. The conditions utilized result in the conversion of lysine to homoarginine with no modification of the amine terminus of the peptides. The sensitivity of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry detection of peptides was increased dramatically following modification. The modification chemistry may be applied to tryptic peptide mixtures prior to desalting and spotting onto MALDI-TOF plates. This technique will be particularly useful for identifying proteins with a high lysine/arginine ratio.  相似文献   

12.
MS protein identification and quantitation are key proteomic techniques in biological research. Besides identification of proteins, MS is used increasingly to characterize secondary protein modifications. This often requires trimming the analytical strategy to a specific type of modification. Direct analysis of protein modifications in proteomic samples is often hampered by the limited dynamic range of current analytical tools. Here we present a fast, sensitive, multiplexed precursor ion scanning mode--implemented on a quadrupole-TOF instrument--that allows the specific detection of any modified peptide or molecule that reveals itself by a specific fragment ion or pattern of fragment ions within a complex proteomic sample. The high mass accuracy of the TOF mass spectrometer is available for the marker ion specificity and the precursor ion mass determination. The method is compatible with chromatographic separation. Fragment ions and intact molecular ions are acquired quasi-simultaneously by continuously switching the collision energy between elevated and low levels. Using this technique many secondary modifications can be analyzed in parallel; however, the number of peptides carrying a specific modification that can be analyzed successfully is limited by the chromatographic resolution or, more generally, by the depth of the resolved time domain.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro chemical modifications in proteins, introduced during sample preparation, can complicate mass spectra and increase the potential for false-positive identifications. While several in vitro protein modifications have been described previously, additional types of such modifications may exist. Here, we report discovery of four types of in vitro protein modifications, identified by HPLC/MS/MS analysis and nonrestrictive protein sequence alignment by PTMap, an algorithm recently developed in our laboratory. These novel in vitro modifications included ethylation of aspartate and glutamate (+28 Da), esterification of aspartate and glutamate by glycerol (+74 Da), loss of 19 Da from lysine, and addition of 108 Da to cysteine. We confirmed that these modifications occurred in vitro and not in vivo in control experiments designed to avoid conditions likely to induce the modifications. We propose a plausible molecular mechanism for the -19 Da modification of lysine. Our study therefore conclusively identifies several novel in vitro protein modifications, suggests ways to avoid these modifications, and highlights the possibility of misidentification of peptides because of in vitro modifications.  相似文献   

14.
Reversed-phase liquid chromatography interfaced to electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS) allows analysis of very complex peptide mixtures at great sensitivity, but it can be very time-consuming, typically using 60 min, or more, per sample analysis. We recently introduced the isocratic solid phase extraction-liquid chromatography (SPE-LC) technology for rapid separation (~8 min) of simple peptide samples. We now extend these studies to demonstrate the potential of SPE-LC separation in combination with a hybrid linear ion trap-Orbitrap tandem mass spectrometer for efficient analysis of peptide samples in proteomics research. The system performance of SPE-LC-MS/MS was evaluated in terms of sensitivity and efficiency for the analysis of tryptic peptide digests obtained from samples consisting of up to 12 standard proteins. The practical utility of the analytical setup was demonstrated by the analysis of <15 microg depleted human serum proteome by a combination of SDS-PAGE and SPE-LC-MS/MS. A total of 88 unique gene products spanning 3 orders of magnitude in serum protein concentration were identified using stringent database search criteria.  相似文献   

15.
Multiplexed tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) has recently been demonstrated as a means to increase the throughput of peptide identification in liquid chromatography (LC) MS/MS experiments. In this approach, a set of parent species is dissociated simultaneously and measured in a single spectrum (in the same manner that a single parent ion is conventionally studied), providing a gain in sensitivity and throughput proportional to the number of species that can be simultaneously addressed. In the present work, simulations performed using the Caenorhabditis elegans predicted proteins database show that multiplexed MS/MS data allow the identification of tryptic peptides from mixtures of up to ten peptides from a single dataset with only three "y" or "b" fragments per peptide and a mass accuracy of 2.5 to 5 ppm. At this level of database and data complexity, 98% of the 500 peptides considered in the simulation were correctly identified. This compares favorably with the rates obtained for classical MS/MS at more modest mass measurement accuracy. LC multiplexed Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance MS/MS data obtained from a 66 kDa protein (bovine serum albumin) tryptic digest sample are presented to illustrate the approach, and confirm that peptides can be effectively identified from the C. elegans database to which the protein sequence had been appended.  相似文献   

16.
Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) allows for the rapid identification of many types of post-translational modifications (PTMs), especially those that can be detected by a diagnostic mass shift in one or more peptide fragment ions (for example, phosphorylation). But some PTMs (for example, SUMOs and other ubiquitin-like modifiers) themselves produce multiple fragment ions; combined with fragments from the modified target peptide, a complex overlapping fragmentation pattern is thus generated, which is uninterpretable by standard peptide sequencing software. Here we introduce SUMmOn, an automated pattern recognition tool that detects diagnostic PTM fragment ion series within complex MS/MS spectra, to identify modified peptides and modification sites within these peptides. Using SUMmOn, we demonstrate for the first time that human SUMO-1 multimerizes in vitro primarily via three N-terminal lysines, Lys7, Lys16 and Lys17. Notably, our method is theoretically applicable to any type of modification or chemical moiety generating a unique fragment ion pattern.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed a new and sensitive LC-MS platform, Extended Range Proteomic Analysis (ERPA), which is able to achieve very high sequence coverage and comprehensive characterization of post-translational modifications in complex proteins. This new platform provides advantages of both the top-down and bottom-up proteomic approaches by combining (i) digestion of the protein with an enzyme, such as Lys-C, which cuts less frequently than trypsin, leading to on average a higher molecular weight peptide size, (ii) high-performance LC separation of the resulting fragments, (iii) a new data acquisition strategy using the LTQ-FTMS, a hybrid mass spectrometer that couples a linear ion trap with a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) cell, for analysis of peptides in the range of 0.5 to 10 kDa, and (iv) new data analysis methods for assigning large peptide structures and determining the site of attachment of post-translational modifications as well as structural features from the accurate precursor mass together with MS(2) and MS(3) fragmentations. The LC retention of the Lys-C fragments is increased, relative to a tryptic digest, due to the generally greater hydrophobicity of the larger peptides, a result that is particularly important for peptides containing hydrophilic modifications such as glycosylation and phosphorylation. Furthermore, additional positively charged arginine and lysine residues in the Lys-C fragments enhance the sensitivity of the post-translationally modified phospho- and glycopeptides by at least 10-fold relative to tryptic fragments. In typical operation, the FTICR cell provides a survey scan with the high mass resolution (> 100 000) and accurate mass (<2 ppm) to characterize the higher charge-state precursor ions of the larger peptides. In parallel, the linear ion trap provides MS(2) and MS(3) fragmentation spectra, with a scan speed sufficiently fast for on-line LC-MS. Together, these data provide multiple means to determine or enhance the confidence of assignment of large or complicated peptide. Using ERPA, we demonstrate >95% sequence coverage in the analysis of two heavily phosphorylated and glycosylated proteins, beta-casein at the 50 fmole level and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) at the 1 pmole level. In summary, the combination of digestion strategy, high-performance separation, and the hybrid LTQ-FTMS instrument enables comprehensive characterization of large proteins, including posttranslational modifications.  相似文献   

18.
Comprehensive proteome profiling of breast cancer tissue samples is challenging, as the tissue samples contain many proteins with varying concentrations and modifications. We report an effective sample preparation strategy combined with liquid chromatography (LC) electrospray ionization (ESI) quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) MS/MS for proteome analysis of human breast cancer tissue. The complexity of the breast cancer tissue proteome was reduced by using protein precipitation from a tissue extract, followed by sequential protein solubilization in solvents of different solubilizing strength. The individual fractions of protein mixtures or subproteomes were subjected to trypsin digestion and the resultant peptides were separated by strong cation exchange (SCX) chromatography, followed by reversed-phase capillary LC combined with high resolution and high accuracy ESI-QTOF MS/MS. This approach identified 14407 unique peptides from 3749 different proteins based on peptide matches with scores above the threshold scores at the 95% confidence level in MASCOT database search of the acquired MS/MS spectra. The false positive rate of peptide matches was determined to be 0.95% by using the target-decoy sequence search strategy. On the basis of gene ontology categorization, the identified proteins represented a wide variety of biological functions, cellular processes, and cellular locations.  相似文献   

19.
Several approaches were explored for obtaining high sequence coverage in protein modification studies performed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Human serum albumin (HSA, 66.5kDa) was used as a model protein for this work. Experimental factors considered in this study included the type of matrix used for MALDI-TOF MS, the protein digestion method, and the use of fractionation for peptide digests prior to MALDI-TOF MS analysis. A mixture of alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid and 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid was employed as the final matrix for HSA. When used with a tryptic digest, this gave unique information on only half of the peptides in the primary structure of HSA. However, the combined use of three enzyme digests based on trypsin, endoproteinase Lys-C, and endoproteinase Glu-C increased this sequence coverage to 72.8%. The use of a ZipTip column to fractionate peptides in these digests prior to analysis increased the sequence coverage to 97.4%. These conditions made it possible to examine unique peptides from nearly all of the structure of HSA and to identify specific modifications to this protein (e.g., glycation sites). For instance, Lys199 was confirmed as a glycation site on normal HSA, whereas Lys536 and Lys389 were identified as additional modification sites on minimally glycated HSA.  相似文献   

20.
Due to hydrophobicity, structural analysis of integral membrane proteins poses a formidable challenge for current mass spectrometry-based proteomics approaches. Herein, we demonstrate results from optimized sample preparation and enzymatic proteolysis procedures for the complete primary structure determination of a targeted integral membrane protein, lens aquaporin 0 (AQP0). Plasma membrane from bovine lens tissue was alkali treated and tryptic digestion was performed in optimized acetonitrile-ammonium bicarbonate solution. Full sequence coverage of AQP0 was observed as tryptic peptides using both matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI MS) and capillary liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (cLC/MS/MS). An amino acid mutation of Thr to Ile/Leu at residue 199 was deduced based on MS/MS results. In a complementary effort to fully sequence the protein, peptic digestion was developed to take advantage of hydrophobic protein solubility in organic acid as well as the decreased activity of pepsin at low pH. Peptic digestion in 10% formic acid (pH 1.2) generated peptides of 500 to 3000 Da and gave 100% sequence coverage by cLC/MS/MS. In addition to post-translational modifications reported previously, a new phosphorylation site at serine 229 and two oxidation sites at tryptophan 202 and 205 were detected on the protein. These methodologies provide complementary detergent- and CNBr-free procedures for detailed analysis of this important membrane channel protein and offer promise for analysis of the integral membrane proteome.  相似文献   

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