3 research outputs found

    Development of a Peptidase-Resistant Substrate for Single-Cell Measurement of Protein Kinase B Activation

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    An iterative design strategy using three criteria was utilized to develop a peptidase-resistant substrate peptide for protein kinase B. Libraries of peptides possessing non-native amino acids were screened for time to 50% phosphorylation, degradation half-life within a lysate, and appearance of a dominant fragment. The lead peptide possessed a half-life of 92 ± 7 and 16 ± 2 min in HeLa and LNCaP cytosolic lysates, respectively, representing a 4.6- and 2.7-fold lifetime improvement over that of the starting peptide. The redesigned peptide possessed a 4.5-fold improvement in phosphorylation efficiency compared to the starting peptide. The same peptide fragments were formed when the lead peptide was incubated in a lysate or loaded into single cells although the fragments formed in significantly different ratios suggesting that distinct peptidases metabolized the peptide in the two preparations. The rate of peptide degradation and phosphorylation was on average 0.1 ± 0.2 zmol pg<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> and 0.04 ± 0.08 zmol pg<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>, respectively, for single LNCaP cells loaded with 4 ± 8 μM of peptide. Peptidase-resistant kinase substrates should find widespread utility in both lysate-based and single-cell assays of kinase activity

    Rational Design of a Dephosphorylation-Resistant Reporter Enables Single-Cell Measurement of Tyrosine Kinase Activity

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    Although peptide-based reporters of protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity have been used to study PTK enzymology <i>in vitro</i>, the application of these reporters to intracellular conditions is compromised by their dephosphorylation, preventing PTK activity measurements. Nonproteinogenic amino acids may be utilized to rationally design selective peptidic ligands by accessing greater chemical and structural diversity than is available using the native amino acids. We describe a peptidic reporter that, upon phosphorylation by the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), is resistant to dephosphorylation both <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in cellulo</i>. The reporter contains a conformationally constrained phosphorylatable moiety (7-(<i>S</i>)-hydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-3-carboxylic acid) in the place of l-tyrosine and is efficiently phosphorylated in A431 epidermoid carcinoma cells. Dephosphorylation of the reporter occurs 3 orders of magnitude more slowly compared with that of the conventional tyrosine-containing reporter

    Measurement of Protein Kinase B Activity in Single Primary Human Pancreatic Cancer Cells

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    An optimized peptide substrate was used to measure protein kinase B (PKB) activity in single cells. The peptide substrate was introduced into single cells, and capillary electrophoresis was used to separate and quantify nonphosphorylated and phosphorylated peptide. The system was validated in three model pancreatic cancer cell lines before being applied to primary cells from human pancreatic adenocarcinomas propagated in nude mice. As measured by phosphorylation of peptide substrate, each tumor cell line exhibited statistically different median levels of PKB activity (65%, 21%, and 4% phosphorylation in PANC-1 (human pancreatic carcinoma), CFPAC-1 (human metastatic ductal pancreatic adenocarcinoma), and HPAF-II cells (human pancreatic adenocarcinoma), respectively) with CFPAC-1 cells demonstrating two populations of cells or bimodal behavior in PKB activation levels. The primary cells exhibited highly variable PKB activity at the single cell level, with some cells displaying little to no activity and others possessing very high levels of activity. This system also enabled simultaneous characterization of peptidase action in single cells by measuring the amount of cleaved peptide substrate in each cell. The tumor cell lines displayed degradation rates statistically similar to one another (0.02, 0.06, and 0.1 zmol pg<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>, for PANC-1, CFPAC-1, and HPAF-II cells, respectively) while the degradation rate in primary cells was 10-fold slower. The peptide cleavage sites also varied between tissue-cultured and primary cells, with 5- and 8-residue fragments formed in tumor cell lines and only the 8-residue fragment formed in primary cells. These results demonstrate the ability of chemical cytometry to identify important differences in enzymatic behavior between primary cells and tissue-cultured cell lines
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