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1.
J Magn Reson ; 266: 73-80, 2016 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26899226

ABSTRACT

The 2015 Gunther Laukien Prize recognized solution NMR studies of protein dynamics and thermodynamics. This Perspective surveys aspects of the development and application of NMR spin relaxation for investigations of protein flexibility and function over multiple time scales in solution. Methods highlighted include analysis of overall rotational diffusion, theoretical descriptions of R1ρ relaxation, and molecular dynamics simulations to interpret NMR spin relaxation. Applications are illustrated for the zinc-finger domain Xfin-31, the calcium-binding proteins calbindin D9k and calmodulin, and the bZip transcription factor of GCN4.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Peptide Mapping/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, Protein/methods , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Forecasting , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteins/analysis , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Sequence Analysis, Protein/trends
4.
J Mass Spectrom ; 45(12): 1373-82, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20812376

ABSTRACT

Hydroxyl radical protein footprinting coupled to mass spectrometry has been developed over the last decade and has matured to a powerful method for analyzing protein structure and dynamics. It has been successfully applied in the analysis of protein structure, protein folding, protein dynamics, and protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. Using synchrotron radiolysis, exposure of proteins to a 'white' X-ray beam for milliseconds provides sufficient oxidative modification to surface amino acid side chains, which can be easily detected and quantified by mass spectrometry. Thus, conformational changes in proteins or protein complexes can be examined using a time-resolved approach, which would be a valuable method for the study of macromolecular dynamics. In this review, we describe a new application of hydroxyl radical protein footprinting to probe the time evolution of the calcium-dependent conformational changes of gelsolin on the millisecond timescale. The data suggest a cooperative transition as multiple sites in different molecular subdomains have similar rates of conformational change. These findings demonstrate that time-resolved protein footprinting is suitable for studies of protein dynamics that occur over periods ranging from milliseconds to seconds. In this review, we also show how the structural resolution and sensitivity of the technology can be improved as well. The hydroxyl radical varies in its reactivity to different side chains by over two orders of magnitude, thus oxidation of amino acid side chains of lower reactivity are more rarely observed in such experiments. Here we demonstrate that the selected reaction monitoring (SRM)-based method can be utilized for quantification of oxidized species, improving the signal-to-noise ratio. This expansion of the set of oxidized residues of lower reactivity will improve the overall structural resolution of the technique. This approach is also suggested as a basis for developing hypothesis-driven structural mass spectrometry experiments.


Subject(s)
Hydroxyl Radical/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Peptide Mapping/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry/trends , Peptide Mapping/trends , Protein Conformation
5.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 21(4): 487-500, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20116283

ABSTRACT

Physical interactions between proteins and the formation of stable complexes form the basis of most biological functions. Therefore, a critical step toward understanding the integrated workings of the cell is to determine the structure of protein complexes, and reveal how their structural organization dictates function. Studying the three-dimensional organization of protein assemblies, however, represents a major challenge for structural biologists, due to the large size of the complexes, their heterogeneous composition, their flexibility, and their asymmetric structure. In the last decade, mass spectrometry has proven to be a valuable tool for analyzing such noncovalent complexes. Here, I illustrate the breadth of structural information that can be obtained from this approach, and the steps taken to elucidate the stoichiometry, topology, packing, dynamics, and shape of protein complexes. In addition, I illustrate the challenges that lie ahead, and the future directions toward which the field might be heading.


Subject(s)
Forecasting , Mass Spectrometry/trends , Microchemistry/trends , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/ultrastructure
6.
Mass Spectrom Rev ; 29(2): 326-48, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19492311

ABSTRACT

In the post-genomics era, proteomics has become a central branch in life sciences. An understanding of biological functions will not only rely on protein identification, but also on protein quantification in a living organism. Most of the existing methods for quantitative proteomics are based on isotope labeling combined with molecular mass spectrometry. Recently, a remarkable progress that utilizes inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) as an attractive complement to electrospray MS and MALDI MS for protein quantification, especially for absolute quantification, has been achieved. This review will selectively discuss the recent advances of ICP-MS-based technique, which will be expected to further mature and to become one of the key methods in quantitative proteomics.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Peptide Mapping/methods , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteins/analysis , Proteins/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization/instrumentation , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization/methods
7.
Mass Spectrom Rev ; 29(2): 197-246, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19598206

ABSTRACT

The brain is unquestionably the most fascinating organ, and the hippocampus is crucial in memory storage and retrieval and plays an important role in stress response. In temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), the seizure origin typically involves the hippocampal formation. Despite tremendous progress, current knowledge falls short of being able to explain its function. An emerging approach toward an improved understanding of the complex molecular mechanisms that underlie functions of the brain and hippocampus is neuroproteomics. Mass spectrometry has been widely used to analyze biological samples, and has evolved into an indispensable tool for proteomics research. In this review, we present a general overview of the application of mass spectrometry in proteomics, summarize neuroproteomics and systems biology-based discovery of protein biomarkers for epilepsy, discuss the methodology needed to explore the epileptic hippocampus proteome, and also focus on applications of ingenuity pathway analysis (IPA) in disease research. This neuroproteomics survey presents a framework for large-scale protein research in epilepsy that can be applied for immediate epileptic biomarker discovery and the far-reaching systems biology understanding of the protein regulatory networks. Ultimately, knowledge attained through neuroproteomics could lead to clinical diagnostics and therapeutics to lessen the burden of epilepsy on society.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , Epilepsy/metabolism , Mass Spectrometry/trends , Nerve Tissue Proteins/analysis , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteome/analysis , Biomarkers/analysis , Gene Expression Profiling/trends , Humans , Neurology/trends , Proteomics/trends
9.
Biotechniques ; 44(5): 667-8, 670, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18474043

ABSTRACT

While definitely not a new technology, mass spectrometry (MS) has seen incredible growth over the past 25 years. Mass spectrometry has rapidly evolved to the forefront of analytical techniques; its ability to analyze proteins is the major driving force in the field of proteomics. MS instrumentation has increased approximately 5-fold in sensitivity every three years. The level of performance that is achievable with MS today allows scientists to study proteins in ways that were inconceivable a quarter century ago. This review of the history of MS over the past 25 years is timely in that it encompasses two of the biggest developments, electrospray and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI), which have enabled many of the uses of this technology today.


Subject(s)
Mass Spectrometry/methods , Mass Spectrometry/trends , Peptide Mapping/methods , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteomics/methods , Proteomics/trends , Mass Spectrometry/instrumentation , Peptide Mapping/instrumentation , Proteomics/instrumentation
10.
Biotechniques ; 44(5): 671-9, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18474044

ABSTRACT

The importance of the analysis of signaling pathways has been proven for many years by the elucidation of key signaling molecules. However, in most cases these pathways tend to represent a rather narrow view of the biological state under investigation. Clearly a more detailed understanding of the complexities of cross-talk between signaling pathways is required to further our knowledge of normal and disease processes. The tools that provide the framework for this increased understanding of biology, those that enable identification, characterization, and quantitation of sites of phosphorylation in proteins, have advanced over the past 25 years. This review will present a brief overview of the history of the tools used in phosphorylation analysis and the latest technologies that are being applied in this field, such as mass spectrometry (for broad-based discovery efforts) and flow cytometry (for translation to clinical applications).


Subject(s)
Mass Spectrometry/trends , Peptide Mapping/trends , Phosphates/chemistry , Phosphorylation , Protein Interaction Mapping/trends , Binding Sites , Drug Design , Protein Binding
11.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 19(5): 629-31, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18374599

ABSTRACT

The technique of charge reduction electrospray mass spectrometry (CREMS), which can reduce the charge state complexity produced in electrospray ionization (ESI), is discussed.


Subject(s)
Peptide Mapping/methods , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteome/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization/methods , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization/trends , Sensitivity and Specificity , Static Electricity , United States
12.
Biotechnol Annu Rev ; 13: 149-200, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17875477

ABSTRACT

One attractive method for monitoring biomolecular interactions in a highly parallel fashion is the use of microarrays. Protein microarray technology is an emerging and promising tool for protein analysis, which ultimately may have a large impact in clinical diagnostics, drug discovery studies and basic protein research. This chapter is based upon several original papers presenting our effort in the development of new protein microarray chip technology. The work describes a novel 3D surface/platform for protein characterization based on porous silicon. The simple adjustment of pore morphology and geometry offers a convenient way to control wetting behavior of the microarray substrates. In this chapter, an interesting insight into the surface role in bioassays performance is made. The up-scaled fabrication of the novel porous chips is demonstrated and stability of the developed supports as well as the fluorescent bioassay reproducibility and data quality issues are addressed. We also describe the efforts made by our group to link protein microarrays to matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS), suggesting porous silicon as a convenient platform for fast on-surface protein digestion protocols linked to MS-readout. The fabrication of ultra- and superhydrophobic states on porous silicon is also described and the utilization of these water-repellent properties for a new microscaled approach to superhydrophobic MALDI-TOF MS target anchor chip is covered.


Subject(s)
Biological Assay/trends , Data Display , Peptide Mapping/trends , Protein Array Analysis/trends , Silicon/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/trends , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Porosity
13.
Brief Bioinform ; 8(5): 304-17, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17584764

ABSTRACT

Mass spectrometry offers a high-throughput approach to quantifying the proteome associated with a biological sample and hence has become the primary approach of proteomic analyses. Computation is tightly coupled to this advanced technological platform as a required component of not only peptide and protein identification, but quantification and functional inference, such as protein modifications and interactions. Proteomics faces several key computational challenges such as identification of proteins and peptides from tandem mass spectra as well as their quantitation. In addition, the application of proteomics to systems biology requires understanding the functional proteome, including how the dynamics of the cell change in response to protein modifications and complex interactions between biomolecules. This review presents an overview of recently developed methods and their impact on these core computational challenges currently facing proteomics.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/trends , Mass Spectrometry/trends , Peptide Mapping/trends , Protein Interaction Mapping/methods , Proteome/chemistry , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics/trends , Forecasting , Gene Expression Profiling/trends , Sequence Analysis, Protein/trends
16.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 11(1): 20-8, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17174138

ABSTRACT

The field of activity-based proteomics is a relatively new discipline that makes use of small molecules, termed activity-based probes (ABPs), to tag and monitor distinct sets of proteins within a complex proteome. These activity-dependant labels facilitate analysis of systems-wide changes at the level of enzyme activity rather than simple protein abundance. While the use of small molecule inhibitors to label enzyme targets is not a new concept, the past ten years have seen a rapid expansion in the diversity of probe families that have been developed. In addition to increasing the number and types of enzymes that can be targeted by this method, there has also been an increase in the number of methods used to visualize probes once they are bound to target enzymes. In particular, the use of small organic fluorophores has created a wealth of applications for ABPs that range from biochemical profiling of diverse proteomes to direct imaging of active enzymes in live cells and even whole animals. In addition, the advent of new bioorthogonal coupling chemistries now enables a diverse array of tags to be added after targets are labeled with an ABP. This strategy has opened the door to new in vivo applications for activity-based proteomic methods.


Subject(s)
Enzymes , Molecular Probe Techniques , Peptide Mapping/methods , Protein Array Analysis/methods , Proteomics/methods , Affinity Labels/chemistry , Affinity Labels/metabolism , Enzyme Activation , Enzymes/chemistry , Enzymes/genetics , Enzymes/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic , Peptide Mapping/trends , Protein Array Analysis/trends , Proteomics/trends , Sensitivity and Specificity , Structure-Activity Relationship
17.
Biotechnol Lett ; 29(1): 1-16, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17091378

ABSTRACT

Microbial metabolomics has received much attention in recent years mainly because it supports and complements a wide range of microbial research areas from new drug discovery efforts to metabolic engineering. Broadly, the term metabolomics refers to the comprehensive (qualitative and quantitative) analysis of the complete set of all low molecular weight metabolites present in and around growing cells at a given time during their growth or production cycle. This review focuses on the past, current and future development of various experimental protocols in the rapid developing area of metabolomics in the ongoing quest to reliably quantify microbial metabolites formed under defined physiological conditions. These developments range from rapid sample collection, instant quenching of microbial metabolic activity, extraction of the relevant intracellular metabolites as well as quantification of these metabolites using enzyme based and or modern high tech hyphenated analytical protocols, mainly chromatographic techniques coupled to mass spectrometry (LC-MS(n), GC-MS(n), CE-MS(n)), where n indicates the number of tandem mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR).


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Fungi/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling/trends , Models, Biological , Proteome/metabolism , Bacteria/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Forecasting , Fungi/genetics , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteome/genetics , Proteomics/trends
18.
Curr Opin Chem Biol ; 11(1): 12-9, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17189712

ABSTRACT

Although chemical methods to modify proteins in a sequence-specific manner have yet to be developed, site-specific post-translational modification of proteins has recently emerged as a major focus in biological chemistry. Post-translational modification with functionalized substrate analogues opens up several unique avenues to induce selective reactivity into proteins in a sequence-specific manner, and can be applied to protein identification and manipulation in both in vitro and in vivo contexts. Further in vivo applications of this method will enable the imaging of cellular processes, avoiding nonspecific labeling and probe scattering, major complications observed in nonenzymatic methods. Additionally, new tools for in vitro protein modification have been developed that offer more versatile ways to study protein structure and function.


Subject(s)
Peptide Mapping/methods , Protein Engineering , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Proteins , Proteomics/methods , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Peptide Mapping/trends , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/genetics , Proteins/metabolism , Proteomics/trends , Staining and Labeling
19.
Biotechnol Lett ; 28(14): 1047-59, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16794768

ABSTRACT

Electron capture dissociation (ECD) represents one of the most recent and significant advancements in tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) for the identification and characterization of polypeptides. In comparison with the conventional fragmentation techniques, such as collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), ECD provides more extensive sequence fragments, while allowing the labile modifications to remain intact during backbone fragmentation--an important attribute for characterizing post-translational modifications. Herein, we present a brief overview of the ECD technique as well as selected applications in characterization of peptides and proteins. Case studies including characterization and localization of amino acid glycosylation, methionine oxidation, acylation, and "top-down" protein mass spectrometry using ECD will be presented. A recent technique, coined as electron transfer dissociation (ETD), will be also discussed briefly.


Subject(s)
Peptide Mapping/instrumentation , Peptide Mapping/methods , Peptides/chemistry , Proteins/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, Protein/methods , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/instrumentation , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Amino Acid Sequence , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptide Mapping/trends , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/trends
20.
Internist (Berl) ; 47 Suppl 1: S40-8, 2006 Jun.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16773365

ABSTRACT

Ductal pancreatic adenocarcinoma is a dismal disease, having the worst prognosis of all solid tumors. While genomics and transcriptomics have provided a wealth of data, no contribution has been made to clinical medicine in terms of diagnostic or prognostic markers. Hope lies in yet another novel technology, proteomics. Conceptually, proteomics bears the advantage of incorporating both posttranslational modifications as well as host factors. This is thought to be important in factors influencing survival such as chemoresistance. This tutorial review discusses the state of the art in pancreatic cancer proteomics in light of technical developments. At this moment, proteomics is still at the beginning in clinical application. First results, however, suggest some hope for the development of a new understanding of the molecular biology in pancreatic cancer yielding into very specific markers of disease or allowing a rational and individualized therapy.


Subject(s)
Adenocarcinoma/drug therapy , Adenocarcinoma/metabolism , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism , Pancreatic Neoplasms/drug therapy , Pancreatic Neoplasms/metabolism , Proteome/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use , Drug Delivery Systems/methods , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm , Gene Expression Profiling/trends , Peptide Mapping/methods , Peptide Mapping/trends
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