Many cellular processes are regulated by reversible
protein phosphorylation, and the ability to broadly identify
and quantify phosphoproteins from proteomes would
provide a basis for gaining a better understanding of these
dynamic cellular processes. However, such a sensitive,
efficient, and global method capable of addressing the
phosphoproteome has yet to be developed. Here we
describe an improved stable-isotope labeling method
using a phosphoprotein isotope-coded solid-phase tag
(PhIST) for isolating and measuring the relative abundances of phosphorylated peptides from complex peptide
mixtures resulting from the enzymatic digestion of extracted proteins. The PhIST approach is an extension of
the previously reported phosphoprotein isotope-coded
affinity tag (PhIAT) approach developed by our laboratory,, where phosphoseryl and phosphothreonyl residues were derivatized by hydroxide ion-mediated β-elimination followed by the Michael addition of 1,2-ethanedithiol (EDT). Instead of using the biotin affinity tag,
peptides containing the EDT moiety were captured and
labeled in one step using isotope-coded solid-phase
reagents containing either light (12C6, 14N) or heavy (13C6,
15N) stable isotopes. The captured peptides labeled with
the isotope-coded tags were released from the solid-phase
support by UV photocleavage and analyzed by capillary
liquid chromatography−tandem mass spectrometry. The
efficiency and sensitivity of the PhIST labeling approach
for identification of phosphopeptides from mixtures were
determined using casein proteins. Its utility for proteomic
applications was demonstrated by the labeling of soluble
phosphoproteins from a human breast cancer cell line