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1.
Mol Biosyst ; 8(10): 2692-8, 2012 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22814712

ABSTRACT

Electron transfer dissociation (ETD) is a useful and complementary activation method for peptide fragmentation in mass spectrometry. However, ETD spectra typically receive a relatively low score in the identifications of 2+ ions. To overcome this challenge, we, for the first time, systematically interrogated the benefits of combining ion charge enhancing methods (dimethylation, guanidination, m-nitrobenzyl alcohol (m-NBA) or Lys-C digestion) and differential search algorithms (Mascot, Sequest, OMSSA, pFind and X!Tandem). A simple sample (BSA) and a complex sample (AMJ2 cell lysate) were selected in benchmark tests. Clearly distinct outcomes were observed through different experimental protocol. In the analysis of AMJ2 cell lines, X!Tandem and pFind revealed 92.65% of identified spectra; m-NBA adduction led to a 5-10% increase in average charge state and the most significant increase in the number of successful identifications, and Lys-C treatment generated peptides carrying mostly triple charges. Based on the complementary identification results, we suggest that a combination of m-NBA and Lys-C strategies accompanied by X!Tandem and pFind can greatly improve ETD identification.


Subject(s)
Cell Extracts/analysis , Electrons , Peptide Fragments/analysis , Proteomics/methods , Serum Albumin, Bovine/analysis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Algorithms , Animals , Benzyl Alcohols/chemistry , Cattle , Cell Extracts/chemistry , Guanidines/chemistry , Macrophages , Mice , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Proteolysis , Serum Albumin, Bovine/chemistry , Static Electricity
2.
Proteomics ; 9(24): 5414-24, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19834888

ABSTRACT

In mammalian cells, when tandem affinity purification approach is employed, the existence of untagged endogenous target protein and repetitive washing steps together result in overall low yield of purified/stable complexes and the loss of weakly and transiently interacting partners of biological significance. To avoid the trade-offs involving in methodological sensitivity, precision, and throughput, here we introduce an integrated method, biotin tagging coupled with amino acid-coded mass tagging, for highly sensitive and accurate screening of mammalian protein-protein interactions. Without the need of establishing a stable cell line, using a short peptide tag which could be specifically biotinylated in vivo, the biotin-tagged target/bait protein was then isolated along with its associates efficiently by streptavidin magnetic microbeads in a single step. In a pulled-down complex amino acid-coded mass tagging serves as "in-spectra" quantitative markers to distinguish those bait-specific interactors from non-specific background proteins under stringent criteria. Applying this biotin tagging coupled with amino acid-coded mass tagging approach, we first biotin-tagged in vivo a multi-functional protein family member, 14-3-3epsilon, which was expressed at close to endogenous level. Starting with approximately 20 millions of 293T cells which were significantly less than what needed for a tandem affinity purification run, 266 specific interactors of 14-3-3epsilon were identified in high confidence.


Subject(s)
14-3-3 Proteins/analysis , 14-3-3 Proteins/metabolism , Biotin/metabolism , Protein Interaction Mapping/methods , Proteome/analysis , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Biotinylation , Cell Line , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Humans , Magnetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics/methods , Streptavidin/metabolism , Transfection
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