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1.
A nanoliter trypsin-based monolithic microreactor coupled with muRPLC-MS/MS was reported for shotgun proteome analysis. The proteins were rapidly digested by the microreactor, and the resulting protein digests were directly loaded onto a muRPLC column for separation followed with detection of the eluted peptides by tandem mass spectrometer. The digestion efficiency and stability of the microreactor was demonstrated by using bovine serum albumin as a model protein. When compared with an incubation time of more than 10 h by free trypsin in the conventional digestion approach, protein mixtures can be digested by the microreactor in several minutes. This system was applied to the analysis of the total cell lysate of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. After a Sequest database search, a total of 1578 unique peptides corresponding to 541 proteins were identified when 590 ng yeast protein was digested by the microreactor with an incubation time of only 1 min.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
A "one-pot" alternative method for processing proteins and isolating peptide mixtures from bacterial samples is presented for liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis and data reduction. The conventional in-solution digestion of the protein contents of bacteria is compared to a small disposable filter unit placed inside a centrifuge vial for processing and digestion of bacterial proteins. Each processing stage allows filtration of excess reactants and unwanted byproduct while retaining the proteins. Upon addition of trypsin, the peptide mixture solution is passed through the filter while retaining the trypsin enzyme. The peptide mixture is then analyzed by LC-MS/MS with an in-house BACid algorithm for a comparison of the experimental unique peptides to a constructed proteome database of bacterial genus, specie, and strain entries. The concentration of bacteria was varied from 10 × 10(7) to 3.3 × 10(3) cfu/mL for analysis of the effect of concentration on the ability of the sample processing, LC-MS/MS, and data analysis methods to identify bacteria. The protein processing method and dilution procedure result in reliable identification of pure suspensions and mixtures at high and low bacterial concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
In this work, polydopamine‐coated magnetic graphene (MG@PDA) nanocomposites were synthesized by a facile method. Trypsin was then directly immobilized on the surface of the nanocomposites through simple PDA chemistry with no need for introducing any other coupling groups. The as‐made MG@PDA nanocomposites inherit not only the large surface area of graphene which makes them capable of immobilizing high amount of trypsin (up to 0.175 mg/mg), but also the good hydrophilicity of PDA which greatly improves their biocompatibility. Moreover, the strong magnetic responsibility makes them easy to be separated from the digested peptide solution when applying a magnetic field. The feasibility of the trypsin‐immobilized MG@PDA (MG@PDA‐trypsin) nanocomposites for protein digestion was investigated and the results indicated their high digestion efficiency in a short digestion time (10 min). In addition, the reusability and stability of the MG@PDA‐trypsin nanocomposites were also tested in our work. To further confirm the efficiency of MG@PDA‐trypsin nanocomposites for proteome analysis, they were applied to digest proteins extracted from skimmed milk, followed by nano RPLC‐ESI‐MS/MS analysis, and a total of 321 proteins were identified, much more than those obtained by 16‐h in‐solution digestion (264 proteins), indicating the great potential of MG@PDA‐trypsin nanocomposites as the supports for high‐throughput proteome study.  相似文献   

8.
Ma J  Hou C  Liang Y  Wang T  Liang Z  Zhang L  Zhang Y 《Proteomics》2011,11(5):991-995
A metal‐ion chelate immobilized enzyme reactor (IMER) supported on organic–inorganic hybrid silica monolith was developed for rapid digestion of proteins. The monolithic support was in situ prepared in a fused silica capillary via the polycondensation between tetraethoxysilane hydrolytic sol and iminodiacetic acid conjugated glycidoxypropyltrimethoxysilane. After activated by Cu2+, trypsin was immobilized onto the monolithic support via metal chelation. Proteolytic capability of such an IMER was evaluated by the digestion of myoglobin and BSA, and the digests were further analyzed by microflow reversed‐phase liquid chromatography with ESI‐MS/MS. Similar sequence coverages of myoglobin and BSA were obtained by IMER, in comparison to those obtained by in‐solution digestion (91 versus 92% for 200 ng myoglobin, and 26 versus 26% for 200 ng BSA). However, the digestion time was shortened from 12 h to 50 s. When the enzymatic activity was decreased after seven runs, the IMER could be easily regenerated by removing Cu2+ via EDTA followed by trypsin immobilization with fresh Cu2+ introduced, yielding the equal sequence coverage (26% for 200 ng BSA). For ~5 μg rat liver extract, even more proteins were identified with the immobilized trypsin digestion within 150 s in comparison to the in‐solution digestion for 24 h (541 versus 483), demonstrating that the IMER could be a promising tool for efficient and high‐throughput proteome profiling.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS), in-gel enzymatic digestion of proteins separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and searches of molecular weight in peptide-mass databases is a powerful and well established method for protein identification in proteomics analysis. For successful protein identification by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry of peptide mixtures, critical parameters include highly specific enzymatic cleavage, high mass accuracy and sufficient numbers and sequence coverage of the peptides which can be analyzed. For in-gel digestion with trypsin, the method employed should be compatible both with enzymatic cleavage and subsequent MALDI-TOF MS analysis. We report here an improved method for preparation of peptides for MALDI-TOF MS mass fingerprinting by using volatile solubilizing agents during the in-gel digestion procedure. Our study clearly demonstrates that modification of the in-gel digestion protocols by addition of dimethyl formamide (DMF) or a mixture of DMF/N,N-dimethyl acetamide at various concentrations can significantly increase the recovery of peptides. These higher yields of peptides resulted in more effective protein identification.  相似文献   

11.
A stable and robust trypsin‐based biocatalytic system was developed and demonstrated for proteomic applications. The system utilizes polymer nanofibers coated with trypsin aggregates for immobilized protease digestions. After covalently attaching an initial layer of trypsin to the polymer nanofibers, highly concentrated trypsin molecules are crosslinked to the layered trypsin by way of a glutaraldehyde treatment. This process produced a 300‐fold increase in trypsin activity compared with a conventional method for covalent trypsin immobilization, and proved to be robust in that it still maintained a high level of activity after a year of repeated recycling. This highly stable form of immobilized trypsin was resistant to autolysis, enabling repeated digestions of BSA over 40 days and successful peptide identification by LC‐MS/MS. This active and stable form of immobilized trypsin was successfully employed in the digestion of yeast proteome extract with high reproducibility and within shorter time than conventional protein digestion using solution phase trypsin. Finally, the immobilized trypsin was resistant to proteolysis when exposed to other enzymes (i.e., chymotrypsin), which makes it suitable for use in “real‐world” proteomic applications. Overall, the biocatalytic nanofibers with trypsin aggregate coatings proved to be an effective approach for repeated and automated protein digestion in proteomic analyses.  相似文献   

12.
A procedure has been developed for protein identification using mass spectrometry (MS) that incorporates sample cleanup, preconcentration, and protein digestion in a single-stage system. The procedure involves the adsorption of a protein, or protein mixture, from solution onto a hydrophobic resin that is contained within a microcolumn. Sample loading is accomplished by flowing the protein solution through the microcolumn, where the protein adsorbs to the hydrophobic surface. The protein is digested while still bound to the hydrophobic surface by flowing a buffered trypsin solution through the column bed. The peptide fragments are subsequently eluted for detection by MALDI or ESI-MS. The procedure is demonstrated using dilute protein samples containing high concentrations of salt, urea, and modest amount of sodium dodecyl sulfate relative to protein. Peptide fragments are also detected by MS from a 500 nM bacteriorhodopsin solution digested in a microcolumn. In this case, a combined cyanogen bromide/trypsin digestion was performed in-column. The procedure is applied to the MALDI-MS/MS identification of proteins present in an individual fraction collected by ion exchange HPLC separation of E. coli total cell extract. An additional application is illustrated in the analysis of a human plasma fraction. A total of 14 proteins, which were present in the sample at sub-micromolar concentrations, were identified from ESI-MS/MS. The microcolumn digestion procedure represents the next step toward a system for fully automated protein analysis through capture and digestion of the adsorbed protein on hydrophobic surfaces.  相似文献   

13.
Complete coverage of all phosphorylation sites in a proteome is the ultimate goal for large-scale phosphoproteome analysis. However, only making use of one protease trypsin for protein digestion cannot cover all phosphorylation sites, because not all tryptic phosphopeptides are detectable in MS. To further increase the phosphoproteomics coverage of HeLa cells, we proposed a tandem digestion approach by using two different proteases. By combining the data set of the first Glu-C digestion and the second trypsin digestion, the tandem digestion approach resulted in the identification of 8062 unique phosphopeptides and 8507 phosphorylation sites in HeLa cells. The conventional trypsin digestion approach resulted in the identification of 3891 unique phosphopeptides and 4647 phosphorylation sites. It was found that the phosphorylation sites identified from the above two approaches were highly complementary. By combining above two data sets, in total we identified 10899 unique phosphopeptides and 11262 phosphorylation sites, corresponding to 3437 unique phosphoproteins with FDR < 1% at peptide level. We also compared the kinase motifs extracted from trypsin, Glu-C, or a second trypsin digestion data sets. It was observed that basophilic motifs were more frequently found in the trypsin and the second trypsin digestion data sets, and the acidic motifs were more frequently found in the Glu-C digestion data set. These results demonstrated that our tandem digestion approach is a good complement to the conventional trypsin digestion approach for improving the phosphoproteomics analysis coverage of HeLa cells.  相似文献   

14.
Tryptic digestion followed by identification using mass spectrometry is an important step in many proteomic studies. Here, we describe the preparation of immobilized, acetylated trypsin for enhanced digestion efficacy in integrated protein analysis platforms. Complete digestion of cytochrome c was obtained with two types of modified-trypsin beads with a contact time of only 4 s, while corresponding unmodified-trypsin beads gave only incomplete digestion. The digestion rate of myoglobin, a protein known to be rather resistant to proteolysis, was not altered by acetylating trypsin and required a buffer containing 35% acetonitrile to obtain complete digestion. The use of acetylated-trypsin beads led to fewer interfering tryptic autolysis products, indicating an increased stability of this modified enzyme. Importantly, the modification did not affect trypsin's substrate specificity, as the peptide map of myoglobin was not altered upon acetylation of immobilized trypsin. Kinetic digestion experiments in solution with low-molecular-weight substrates and cytochrome c confirmed the increased catalytic efficiency (lower K(M) and higher k(cat)) and increased resistance to autolysis of trypsin upon acetylation. Enhancement of catalytic efficiency was correlated with the number of acetylations per molecule. The favorable properties of the new chemically modified trypsin reactor should make it a valuable tool in automated protein analysis systems.  相似文献   

15.
An optimization and comparison of trypsin digestion strategies for peptide/protein identifications by microLC-MS/MS with or without MS compatible detergents in mixed organic-aqueous and aqueous systems was carried out in this study. We determine that adding MS-compatible detergents to proteolytic digestion protocols dramatically increases peptide and protein identifications in complex protein mixtures by shotgun proteomics. Protein solubilization and proteolytic efficiency are increased by including MS-compatible detergents in trypsin digestion buffers. A modified trypsin digestion protocol incorporating the MS compatible detergents consistently identifies over 300 proteins from 5 microg of pancreatic cell lysates and generates a greater number of peptide identifications than trypsin digestion with urea when using LC-MS/MS. Furthermore, over 700 proteins were identified by merging protein identifications from trypsin digestion with three different MS-compatible detergents. We also observe that the use of mixed aqueous and organic solvent systems can influence protein identifications in combinations with different MS-compatible detergents. Peptide mixtures generated from different MS-compatible detergents and buffer combinations show a significant difference in hydrophobicity. Our results show that protein digestion schemes incorporating MS-compatible detergents generate quantitative as well as qualitative changes in observed peptide identifications, which lead to increased protein identifications overall and potentially increased identification of low-abundance proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Trypsin digestion can induce artificial modifications such as asparagine deamidation and N-terminal glutamine cyclization on proteins due to the temperature and the alkaline pH buffers used during digestion. The amount of these artificial modifications is directly proportional to the incubation time of protein samples in the reduction/alkylation buffer and, more important, in the digestion buffer where the peptides are completely solvent exposed. To minimize these artificial modifications, we focused on minimizing the trypsin digestion time by maximizing trypsin activity. Trypsin activity was optimized by the complete removal of guanidine, which is a known trypsin inhibitor, from the digestion buffer. As a result, near complete trypsin digestion was achieved on reduced and alkylated immunoglobulin gamma molecules in 30 min. The protein tryptic fragments and their modification products were analyzed and quantified by reversed-phase liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry using an in-line LTQ Orbitrap mass spectrometer. The reduction and alkylation reaction time was also minimized by monitoring the completeness of the reaction using a high-resolution time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Using this 30-min in-solution trypsin digestion method, little protocol-induced deamidation or N-terminal glutamine cyclization product was observed and cleaner tryptic maps were obtained due to less trypsin self-digestion and fewer nonspecific cleavages. The throughput of trypsin digestion was also improved significantly compared with conventional trypsin digestion methods.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Kim S  Choi H  Park ZY 《Molecules and cells》2007,23(3):340-348
Although considerable effort has been devoted in the mass spectrometric analysis of phosphorylated peptides, successful identification of multi-phosphorylated peptides in enzymatically digested protein samples still remains challenging. The ionization behavior of multi-phosphorylated peptides appears to be somewhat different from that of mono- or di-phosphorylated peptides. In this study, we demonstrate increased sensitivity of detection of multi-phosphorylated peptides of beta casein without using phosphopeptide enrichment techniques. Proteinase K digestion alone increased the detection limit of beta casein multi-phosphorylated peptides in the LC-MS analysis almost 500 fold, compared to conventional trypsin digestion (~50 pmol). In order to understand this effect, various factors affecting the ionization of phosphopeptides were investigated. Unlike ionizations of phosphopeptides with minor modifications, those of multi-phosphorylated peptides appeared to be subject to effects such as selectively suppressed ionization by more ionizable peptides and decreased ionization efficiency by multi-phosphorylation. The enhanced detection limit of multi- phosphorylated peptides resulting from proteinase K digestion was validated using a complex protein sample, namely a lysate of HEK 293 cells. Compared to trypsin digestion, the numbers of phosphopeptides identified and modification sites per peptide were noticeably increased by proteinase K digestion. Non-specific proteases such as proteinase K and elastase have been used in the past to increase detection of phosphorylation sites but the effectiveness of proteinase K digestion for multi-phosphorylated peptides has not been reported.  相似文献   

19.
A simple method for effective analysis of various proteins has been developed, including membrane proteins, with LC-MS/MS, using CNBr and acetic acid cleavage in one reaction for the digestion of both the M/ and /D/ positions within the target proteins. This dual chemical reaction has been compared with traditional CNBr or an acid cleavage method using a rat kidney membrane fraction and it showed an advantage of the dual reaction with respect to a high number of peptides detected and a high protein recovery. Furthermore, when this dual chemical reaction was combined with trypsin digestion, the number of proteins surprisingly increased approximately 3.0 times more than in the cases with the trypsin digestion only. It was also 1.9 times more than in cases dealing with Tube-Gel trypsin digestion, which is one of the most efficient digestion methods. In addition, it was shown that this dual chemical reaction could be applied to an in-gel digestion. Using the combination of the chemical and enzyme reaction, 172 proteins including 95 membrane proteins were identified. This indicated that this method is one of the efficient systems in single MS/MS analysis. In particular, many membrane proteins identified in this study were detected by a new combination, but not by a traditional trypsin digestion method.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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