34 research outputs found

    Resetting the Epigenetic Histone Code in the MRL-<i>lpr</i>/<i>lpr</i> Mouse Model of Lupus by Histone Deacetylase Inhibition

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    The baseline level of gene expression varies between healthy controls and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, and among SLE patients themselves. These variations may explain the different clinical manifestations and severity of disease observed in SLE. Epigenetic mechanisms, which involve DNA and histone modifications, are predictably associated with distinct transcriptional states. To understand the interplay between various histone modifications, including acetylation and methylation, and lupus disease, we performed differential expression histone modification analysis in splenocytes from the MRL-lpr/lpr mouse model of lupus. Using stable isotope labeling in combination with mass spectrometry, we found global site-specific hypermethylation (except H3 K4 methylation) and hypoacetylation in histone H3 and H4 MRL-lpr/lpr mice compared to control MRL/MPJ mice. Moreover, we have identified novel histone modifications such as H3 K18 methylation, H4 K31 methylation, and H4 K31 acetylation that are differentially expressed in MRL-lpr/lpr mice compared to controls. Finally, in vivo administration of the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A (TSA) corrected the site-specific hypoacetylation states on H3 and H4 in MRL-lpr/lpr mice with improvement of disease phenotype. Thus, this study is the first to establish the association between aberrant histone codes and pathogenesis of autoimmune disease SLE. These aberrant post-translational histone modifications can therefore be reset with histone deacetylase inhibition in vivo. Keywords: mass spectrometry • histone • Lupus • post-translational modification • acetylation • methylation • differential expression • MRL/lpr • stable isotope labelin

    Pepsin-Containing Membranes for Controlled Monoclonal Antibody Digestion Prior to Mass Spectrometry Analysis

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    Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are the fastest growing class of therapeutic drugs, because of their high specificities to target cells. Facile analysis of therapeutic mAbs and their post-translational modifications (PTMs) is essential for quality control, and mass spectrometry (MS) is the most powerful tool for antibody characterization. This study uses pepsin-containing nylon membranes as controlled proteolysis reactors for mAb digestion prior to ultrahigh-resolution Orbitrap MS analysis. Variation of the residence times (from 3 ms to 3 s) of antibody solutions in the membranes yields “bottom-up” (1–2 kDa) to “middle-down” (5–15 kDa) peptide sizes within less than 10 min. These peptides cover the entire sequences of Trastuzumab and a Waters antibody, and a proteolytic peptide comprised of 140 amino acids from the Waters antibody contains all three complementarity determining regions on the light chain. This work compares the performance of “bottom-up” (in-solution tryptic digestion), “top-down” (intact protein fragmentation), and “middle-down” (in-membrane digestion) analysis of an antibody light chain. Data from tandem MS show 99%, 55%, and 99% bond cleavage for “bottom-up”, “top-down”, and “middle-down” analyses, respectively. In-membrane digestion also facilitates detection of PTMs such as oxidation, deamidation, N-terminal pyroglutamic acid formation, and glycosylation. Compared to “bottom-up” and “top-down” approaches for antibody characterization, in-membrane digestion uses minimal sample preparation time, and this technique also yields high peptide and sequence coverage for the identification of PTMs

    Methods for the Detection of Paxillin Post-translational Modifications and Interacting Proteins by Mass Spectrometry

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    Methods for the simultaneous identification of interacting proteins and post-translational modifications of the focal adhesion adapter protein, paxillin, are presented. The strategy includes (1) lower-level, transient transfection of FLAG-GFP-Paxillin into HEK293 cells, (2) incubation of cells with phosphatase inhibitors prior to lysis, (3) purification of paxillin by anti-FLAG immunoprecipitation, (4) analysis of peptides generated from on-beads digestion using LTQ−FT or LTQ−ETD mass spectrometry, and (5) enrichment of phosphopeptide methyl esters with IMAC. Using the above strategies, we identify 29 phosphorylation sites (19 novel and 10 previously reported) and a novel glycosylation site on Ser 74. Furthermore, with this method, we simultaneously detect 10 co-purifying proteins which are present in focal adhesion complexes. Extension of these methods to other substrates should facilitate generation of global phosphorylation maps and protein−protein interactions for any protein of interest. Keywords: paxillin • IMAC • phosphorylation • glycosylation • GlcNAc • methyl esters • peroxovanadate • calyculin A • ET

    <i>O</i>‑GlcNAc Site Mapping by Using a Combination of Chemoenzymatic Labeling, Copper-Free Click Chemistry, Reductive Cleavage, and Electron-Transfer Dissociation Mass Spectrometry

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    As a dynamic post-translational modification, O-linked β-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification (i.e., O-GlcNAcylation) of proteins regulates many biological processes involving cellular metabolism and signaling. However, O-GlcNAc site mapping, a prerequisite for site-specific functional characterization, has been a challenge since its discovery. Herein we present a novel method for O-GlcNAc enrichment and site mapping. In this method, the O-GlcNAc moiety on peptides was labeled with UDP–GalNAz followed by copper-free azide–alkyne cycloaddition with a multifunctional reagent bearing a terminal cyclooctyne, a disulfide bridge, and a biotin handle. The tagged peptides were then released from NeutrAvidin beads upon reductant treatment, alkylated with (3-acryl­amido­propyl)­tri­methyl­ammonium chloride, and subjected to electron-transfer dissociation mass spectrometry analysis. After validation by using standard synthetic peptide gCTD and model protein α-crystallin, such an approach was applied to the site mapping of overexpressed TGF-β-activated kinase 1/MAP3K7 binding protein 2 (TAB2), with four O-GlcNAc sites unambiguously identified. Our method provides a promising tool for the site-specific characterization of O-GlcNAcylation of important proteins

    The Platelet Microparticle Proteome

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    Platelet-derived microparticles are the most abundant type of microparticle in human blood and contribute to many biologically significant processes. Here, we report the first proteomic analysis of microparticles generated from activated platelets. Using 1D SDS-PAGE and liquid chromatography coupled to a linear ion trap mass spectrometer, the identification of 578 proteins was accomplished using a minimum of 5 MS/MS detections of at least two different peptides for each protein. These microparticles displayed many proteins intrinsic to and well-characterized on platelets. For example, microparticles in these experiments were found to contain membrane surface proteins including GPIIIa, GPIIb, and P-selectin, as well other platelet proteins such as the chemokines CXCL4, CXCL7, and CCL5. In addition, approximately 380 of the proteins identified were not found in two previous studies of the platelet proteome. Since several of the proteins detected here have been previously implicated in microparticle formation and/or pathological function, it is hoped that this study will help fuel future work concerning the possible role of microparticles in various disease states. Keywords: microparticle • platelet • proteome • mass spectrometr

    Optimization of Electron Transfer Dissociation via Informed Selection of Reagents and Operating Parameters

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    Electron transfer dissociation (ETD) has improved the mass spectrometric analysis of proteins and peptides with labile post-translational modifications and larger intact masses. Here, the parameters governing the reaction rate of ETD are examined experimentally. Currently, due to reagent injection and isolation events as well as longer reaction times, ETD spectra require significantly more time to acquire than collision-induced dissociation (CID) spectra (>100 ms), resulting in a trade-off in the dynamic range of tandem MS analyses when ETD-based methods are compared to CID-based methods. Through fine adjustment of reaction parameters and the selection of reagents with optimal characteristics, we demonstrate a drastic reduction in the time taken per ETD event. In fact, ETD can be performed with optimal efficiency in nearly the same time as CID at low precursor charge state (<i>z</i> = +3) and becomes faster at higher charge state (<i>z</i> > +3)

    Improved Sequence Analysis of Intact Proteins by Parallel Ion Parking during Electron Transfer Dissociation

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    Electron transfer dissociation (ETD) is an analytically useful tool for primary structure interrogation of intact proteins, but its utility is limited by higher-order reactions with the products. To inhibit these higher-order reactions, first-generation fragment ions are kinetically excited by applying an experimentally tailored parallel ion parking waveform during ETD (ETD-PIP). In combination with subsequent ion/ion proton transfer reactions, precursor-to-product conversion was maximized as evidenced by the consumption of more than 90% of the 21 kDa Protein G precursor to form ETD product ions. The employment of ETD-PIP increased sequence coverage to 90% from 80% with standard ETD. Additionally, the inhibition of sequential electron transfers was reflected in the high number of complementary ion pairs from ETD-PIP (90%) compared to standard ETD (39%)

    Supplementary Tables 1 and 2 and Supplementary Figures 1 through 7 from Identification of Glycopeptides as Posttranslationally Modified Neoantigens in Leukemia

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    Table S1. Summary of samples used for this study. Table S2. Antibodies used in the study. Figure S1. Mass spectra of all peptides referenced in figures 2 and 3. Figure S2. ETD Mass spectrum of RPPItQSSL containing an asymmetrically dimethylated Arg residue. Figure S3. ICS flow cytometry plots for HD5. Figure S4. Gating strategy for phenotyping shown in Fig 2E. Figure S5. Healthy donor immunity to O-GlcNAc peptides measured using IFNgamma ELISpot. Figure S6. ICS flow cytometry plots for HD5. Figure S7. Positional analysis of O-GlcNAc peptides.</p

    Direct Target Site Identification of a Sulfonyl–Triazole Covalent Kinase Probe by LC-MS Chemical Proteomics

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    Chemical proteomics is widely used for the global investigation of protein activity and binding of small molecule ligands. Covalent probe binding and inhibition are assessed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to gain molecular information on targeted proteins and probe-modified sites. The identification of amino acid sites modified by large complex probes, however, is particularly challenging because of the increased size, hydrophobicity, and charge state of peptides derived from modified proteins. These studies are important for direct evaluation of proteome-wide selectivity of inhibitor scaffolds used to develop targeted covalent inhibitors. Here, we disclose reverse-phase chromatography and MS dissociation conditions tailored for binding site identification using a clickable covalent kinase inhibitor containing a sulfonyl–triazole reactive group (KY-26). We applied this LC-MS/MS strategy to identify tyrosine and lysine sites modified by KY-26 in functional sites of kinases and other ATP-/NAD-binding proteins (>65 in total) in live cells. Our studies revealed key bioanalytical conditions to guide future chemical proteomic workflows for direct target site identification of complex irreversible probes and inhibitors
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