90 research outputs found
Estimating the Distribution of Protein Post-Translational Modification States by Mass Spectrometry
Post-translational modifications
(PTMs) of proteins play a central
role in cellular information encoding, but the complexity of PTM state
has been challenging to unravel. A single molecule can exhibit a “modform”
or combinatorial pattern of co-occurring PTMs across multiple sites,
and a molecular population can exhibit a distribution of amounts of
different modforms. How can this “modform distribution”
be estimated by mass spectrometry (MS)? Bottom-up MS, based on cleavage
into peptides, destroys correlations between PTMs on different peptides,
but it is conceivable that multiple proteases with appropriate patterns
of cleavage could reconstruct the modform distribution. We introduce
a mathematical language for describing MS measurements and show, on
the contrary, that no matter how many distinct proteases are available,
the shortfall in information required for reconstruction worsens exponentially
with increasing numbers of sites. Whereas top-down MS on intact proteins
can do better, current technology cannot prevent the exponential worsening.
However, our analysis also shows that all forms of MS yield linear
equations for modform amounts. This permits different MS protocols
to be integrated and the modform distribution to be constrained within
a high-dimensional “modform region”, which may offer
a feasible proxy for analyzing information encoding
Separation of Variant Methylated Histone Tails by Differential Ion Mobility
Differential ion mobility spectrometry (field asymmetric
waveform
ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS)) is emerging as a broadly useful
tool for separation of isomeric modified peptides with post-translational
modifications (PTMs) attached to alternative residues. Such separations
were anticipated to become more challenging for smaller PTMs and longer
peptides. Here, we show that FAIMS can fully resolve localization
variants involving a PTM as minuscule as methylation, even for larger
peptides in the middle-down range
Ion Mobility Separation of Variant Histone Tails Extending to the “Middle-Down” Range
Differential ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) can baseline-resolve
multiple variants of post-translationally modified peptides extending
to the 3–4 kDa range, which differ in the localization of a
PTM as small as acetylation. Essentially orthogonal separations for
different charge states expand the total peak capacity with the number
of observed states that increases for longer polypeptides. This potentially
enables resolving localization variants for yet larger peptides and
even intact proteins
Interrogation of Global Active Site Occupancy of a Fungal Iterative Polyketide Synthase Reveals Strategies for Maintaining Biosynthetic Fidelity
Nonreducing iterative polyketide synthases (NR-PKSs)
are responsible
for assembling the core of fungal aromatic natural products with diverse
biological properties. Despite recent advances in the field, many
mechanistic details of polyketide assembly by these megasynthases
remain unknown. To expand our understanding of substrate loading,
polyketide elongation, cyclization, and product release, active site
occupancy and product output were explored by Fourier transform mass
spectrometry using the norsolorinic acid anthrone-producing polyketide
synthase, PksA, from the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway in <i>Aspergillus parasiticus</i>. Here we report the simultaneous
observation of covalent intermediates from all catalytic domains of
PksA from <i>in vitro</i> reconstitution reactions. The
data provide snapshots of iterative catalysis and reveal an underappreciated
editing function for the <i>C</i>-terminal thioesterase
domain beyond its recently established synthetic role in Claisen/Dieckmann
cyclization and product release. The specificity of thioesterase catalyzed
hydrolysis was explored using biosynthetically relevant protein-bound
and small molecule acyl substrates and demonstrated activity against
hexanoyl and acetyl, but not malonyl. Processivity of polyketide extension
was supported by the inability of a nonhydrolyzable malonyl analog
to trap products of intermediate chain lengths and by the detection
of only fully extended species observed covalently bound to, and as
the predominant products released by, PksA. High occupancy of the
malonyl transacylase domain and fast relative rate of malonyl transfer
compared to starter unit transfer indicate that rapid loading of extension
units onto the carrier domain facilitates efficient chain extension
in a manner kinetically favorable to ultimate product formation
Proteomics Guided Discovery of Flavopeptins: Anti-proliferative Aldehydes Synthesized by a Reductase Domain-Containing Non-ribosomal Peptide Synthetase
Due to the importance of proteases
in regulating cellular processes,
the development of protease inhibitors has garnered great attention.
Peptide-based aldehydes are a class of compounds that exhibit inhibitory
activities against various proteases and proteasomes in the context
of anti-proliferative treatments for cancer and other diseases. More
than a dozen peptide-based natural products containing aldehydes have
been discovered such as chymostatin, leupeptin, and fellutamide; however,
the biosynthetic origin of the aldehyde functionality has yet to be
elucidated. Herein we describe the discovery of a new group of lipopeptide
aldehydes, the flavopeptins, and the corresponding biosynthetic pathway
arising from an orphan gene cluster in <i>Streptomyces</i> sp. NRRL-F6652, a close relative of <i>Streptomyces flavogriseus</i> ATCC 33331. This research was initiated using a proteomics approach
that screens for expressed enzymes involved in secondary metabolism
in microorganisms. Flavopeptins are synthesized through a non-ribosomal
peptide synthetase containing a terminal NADÂ(P)ÂH-dependent reductase
domain likely for the reductive release of the peptide with a C-terminal
aldehyde. Solid-phase peptide synthesis of several flavopeptin species
and derivatives enabled structural verification and subsequent screening
of biological activity. Flavopeptins exhibit sub-micromolar inhibition
activities against cysteine proteases such as papain and calpain as
well as the human 20S proteasome. They also show anti-proliferative
activities against multiple myeloma and lymphoma cell lines
Proteomics Guided Discovery of Flavopeptins: Anti-proliferative Aldehydes Synthesized by a Reductase Domain-Containing Non-ribosomal Peptide Synthetase
Due to the importance of proteases
in regulating cellular processes,
the development of protease inhibitors has garnered great attention.
Peptide-based aldehydes are a class of compounds that exhibit inhibitory
activities against various proteases and proteasomes in the context
of anti-proliferative treatments for cancer and other diseases. More
than a dozen peptide-based natural products containing aldehydes have
been discovered such as chymostatin, leupeptin, and fellutamide; however,
the biosynthetic origin of the aldehyde functionality has yet to be
elucidated. Herein we describe the discovery of a new group of lipopeptide
aldehydes, the flavopeptins, and the corresponding biosynthetic pathway
arising from an orphan gene cluster in <i>Streptomyces</i> sp. NRRL-F6652, a close relative of <i>Streptomyces flavogriseus</i> ATCC 33331. This research was initiated using a proteomics approach
that screens for expressed enzymes involved in secondary metabolism
in microorganisms. Flavopeptins are synthesized through a non-ribosomal
peptide synthetase containing a terminal NADÂ(P)ÂH-dependent reductase
domain likely for the reductive release of the peptide with a C-terminal
aldehyde. Solid-phase peptide synthesis of several flavopeptin species
and derivatives enabled structural verification and subsequent screening
of biological activity. Flavopeptins exhibit sub-micromolar inhibition
activities against cysteine proteases such as papain and calpain as
well as the human 20S proteasome. They also show anti-proliferative
activities against multiple myeloma and lymphoma cell lines
Autopilot: An Online Data Acquisition Control System for the Enhanced High-Throughput Characterization of Intact Proteins
The ability to study organisms by
direct analysis of their proteomes
without digestion via mass spectrometry has benefited greatly from
recent advances in separation techniques, instrumentation, and bioinformatics.
However, improvements to data acquisition logic have lagged in comparison.
Past workflows for Top Down Proteomics (TDPs) have focused on high
throughput at the expense of maximal protein coverage and characterization.
This mode of data acquisition has led to enormous overlap in the identification
of highly abundant proteins in subsequent LC-MS injections. Furthermore,
a wealth of data is left underutilized by analyzing each newly targeted
species as unique, rather than as part of a collection of fragmentation
events on a distinct proteoform. Here, we present a major advance
in software for acquisition of TDP data that incorporates a fully
automated workflow able to detect intact masses, guide fragmentation
to achieve maximal identification and characterization of intact protein
species, and perform database search online to yield real-time protein
identifications. On <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i>, the software
combines fragmentation events of the same precursor with previously
obtained fragments to achieve improved characterization of the target
form by an average of 42 orders of magnitude in confidence. When HCD
fragmentation optimization was applied to intact proteins ions, there
was an 18.5 order of magnitude gain in confidence. These improved
metrics set the stage for increased proteome coverage and characterization
of higher order organisms in the future for sharply improved control
over MS instruments in a project- and lab-wide context
Autopilot: An Online Data Acquisition Control System for the Enhanced High-Throughput Characterization of Intact Proteins
The ability to study organisms by
direct analysis of their proteomes
without digestion via mass spectrometry has benefited greatly from
recent advances in separation techniques, instrumentation, and bioinformatics.
However, improvements to data acquisition logic have lagged in comparison.
Past workflows for Top Down Proteomics (TDPs) have focused on high
throughput at the expense of maximal protein coverage and characterization.
This mode of data acquisition has led to enormous overlap in the identification
of highly abundant proteins in subsequent LC-MS injections. Furthermore,
a wealth of data is left underutilized by analyzing each newly targeted
species as unique, rather than as part of a collection of fragmentation
events on a distinct proteoform. Here, we present a major advance
in software for acquisition of TDP data that incorporates a fully
automated workflow able to detect intact masses, guide fragmentation
to achieve maximal identification and characterization of intact protein
species, and perform database search online to yield real-time protein
identifications. On <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i>, the software
combines fragmentation events of the same precursor with previously
obtained fragments to achieve improved characterization of the target
form by an average of 42 orders of magnitude in confidence. When HCD
fragmentation optimization was applied to intact proteins ions, there
was an 18.5 order of magnitude gain in confidence. These improved
metrics set the stage for increased proteome coverage and characterization
of higher order organisms in the future for sharply improved control
over MS instruments in a project- and lab-wide context
Repurposed HisC Aminotransferases Complete the Biosynthesis of Some Methanobactins
Methanobactins
(Mbns) are ribosomally produced, post-translationally
modified bacterial natural products with a high affinity for copper.
MbnN, a pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-dependent aminotransferase,
performs a transamination reaction that is the last step in the biosynthesis
of Mbns produced by several <i>Methylosinus</i> species.
Our bioinformatic analyses indicate that MbnNs likely derive from
histidinol-phosphate aminotransferases (HisCs), which play a key role
in histidine biosynthesis. A comparison of the HisC active site with
the predicted MbnN structure suggests that MbnN’s active site
is altered to accommodate the larger and more hydrophobic substrates
necessary for Mbn biosynthesis. Moreover, we have confirmed that MbnN
is capable of catalyzing the final transamination step in Mbn biosynthesis
in vitro and in vivo. We also demonstrate that without this final
modification, Mbn exhibits significantly decreased stability under
physiological conditions. An examination of other Mbns and Mbn operons
suggests that N-terminal protection of this family of natural products
is of critical importance and that several different means of N-terminal
stabilization have evolved independently in Mbn subfamilies
Total Synthesis of Tambromycin Enabled by Indole C–H Functionalization
The total synthesis of tambromycin
(<b>1</b>), a recently
isolated tetrapeptide, is reported. This unusual natural product possesses
a highly modified tryptophan-derived indole fragment fused to an α-methylserine-derived
oxazoline ring, and a unique noncanonical amino acid residue named
tambroline (<b>11</b>). A convergent synthesis of tambromycin
was achieved by a 13-step route that leveraged recent developments
in the field of C–H functionalization to prepare the complex
indole fragment, as well as an efficient synthesis of tambroline that
featured a diastereoselective amination of homoproline
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