The ability to identify and quantitate integral membrane proteins is an analytical challenge for mass
spectrometry-based proteomics. The use of surfactants to solubilize and facilitate derivatization of these
proteins can suppress peptide ionization and interfere with chromatographic separations during
microcapillary reversed-phase liquid chromatography-electrospray-tandem mass spectrometry. To
circumvent the use of surfactants and increase proteome coverage, an affinity labeling method has
been developed to target highly hydrophobic integral membrane proteins using organic-assisted
extraction and solubilization followed by cysteinyl-specific labeling using biotinylation reagents. As
demonstrated on the membrane subproteome of Deinococcus radiodurans, specific and quantitative
labeling of integral membrane proteins was achieved using a 60% methanol-aqueous buffer system
and (+)-biotinyl-iodoacetamidyl-3,6-dioxaoctanediamine as the cysteinyl-alkylating reagent. From a total
of 220 unique Cys-labeled peptides, 89 proteins were identified, of which 40 were integral membrane
proteins containing from one to nine mapped transmembrane domains with a maximum positive
GRAVY of 1.08. The protocol described can be used with other stable isotope labeling reagents (e.g.,
ICAT) to enable comparative measurements to be made on differentially expressed hydrophobic
membrane proteins from various organisms (e.g., pathogenic bacteria) and cell types and provide a
viable method for comparative proteome-wide analyses.
Keywords: affinity labeling • biotinylation • membrane proteins • hydrophobic proteins • proteomics • mass
spectrometr