Ac-LysargiNase Complements Trypsin for the Identification of Ubiquitinated Sites.


Journal

Analytical chemistry
ISSN: 1520-6882
Titre abrégé: Anal Chem
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0370536

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
17 12 2019
Historique:
pubmed: 28 11 2019
medline: 22 10 2020
entrez: 28 11 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Mass spectrometry (MS)-based identification of ubiquitinated sites requires trypsin digestion prior to MS analysis, and a signature peptide was produced with a diglycine residue attached to the ubiquitinated lysine (K-ε-GG peptide). However, the missed cleavage of modified lysines by trypsin results in modified peptides with increased length and charge, whose detection by MS analysis is suppressed by the vast majority of internally unmodified peptides. LysargiNase, the mirrored trypsin, is reported to cleave before lysine and arginine residues and to be favorable for the identification of methylation and phosphorylation, but its digestive characteristics related to ubiquitination are unclear. Herein, we tested the capacity of the in-house developed acetylated LysargiNase (Ac-LysargiNase) with high activity and stability, for cleaving ubiquitinated sites in both the seven types of ubiquitin chains and their corresponding K-ε-GG peptides. Interestingly, Ac-LysargiNase could efficiently cleave the K63-linked chain but had little effect on the other types of chains. Additionally, Ac-LysargiNase had higher exopeptidase activity than trypsin. Utilizing these features of the paired mirror proteases, a workflow of trypsin and Ac-LysargiNase tandem digestion was developed for the identification of ubiquitinated proteins. Through this method, the charge states and ionization capacity of the unmodified peptides were efficiently reduced, and the identification of modified sites was consequently increased by 30% to 50%. Strikingly, approximately 15% of the modified sites were cleaved by Ac-LysargiNase, resulting in shorter K-ε-GG peptides for better identification. The enzyme Ac-LysargiNase is expected to serve as an option for increasing the efficiency of modified site identification in ubiquitome research.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31774262
doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b04340
doi:

Substances chimiques

Peptides 0
Exopeptidases EC 3.4.-
Trypsin EC 3.4.21.4
Lysine K3Z4F929H6

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

15890-15898

Auteurs

Weidi Xiao (W)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Junling Zhang (J)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Yihao Wang (Y)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Zijuan Liu (Z)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.
School of Basic Medical Science, Key Laboratory of Combinatorial Biosynthesis and Drug Discovery of Ministry of Education, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences , Wuhan University , Wuhan 430071 , P. R. China.

Fuqiang Wang (F)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Jinshuai Sun (J)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Lei Chang (L)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Zongping Xia (Z)

Translational Medicine Center , The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University , Zhengzhou , Henan 450018 , P. R. China.

Yanchang Li (Y)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.

Ping Xu (P)

State Key Laboratory of Proteomics , Beijing Proteome Research Center , National Center for Protein Sciences (Beijing), Research Unit of Proteomics & Research and Development of New Drug, Institute of Lifeomics, Beijing 102206 , P. R. China.
School of Basic Medical Science, Key Laboratory of Combinatorial Biosynthesis and Drug Discovery of Ministry of Education, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences , Wuhan University , Wuhan 430071 , P. R. China.
Guizhou University School of Medicine , Guiyang 550025 , P.R. China.
Second Clinical Medicine Collage , Guangzhou University Chinese Medicine , Guangzhou 510006 , P. R. China.

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Classifications MeSH