1 research outputs found
Aspartic Protease Nepenthesin‑1 as a Tool for Digestion in Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange Mass Spectrometry
Hydrogen/deuterium exchange coupled
to mass spectrometry (HXMS)
utilizes enzymatic digestion of proteins to localize the information
about altered exchange patterns in protein structure. The ability
of the protease to produce small peptides and overlapping fragments
and provide sufficient coverage of the protein sequence is essential
for localizing regions of interest. Recently, it was shown that there
is an interesting group of proteolytic enzymes from carnivorous pitcher
plants of the genus <i>Nepenthes</i>. In this report, we
describe successful immobilization and the use of one of these enzymes,
nepenthesin-1, in HXMS workflow. In contrast to pepsin, it has different
cleavage specificities, and despite its high inherent susceptibility
to reducing and denaturing agents, it is very stable upon immobilization
and withstands even high concentration of guanidine hydrochloride
and reducing agents. We show that denaturing agents can alter digestion
by reducing protease activity and/or substrate solubility, and additionally,
they influence the trapping of proteolytic peptides onto the reversed
phase resin