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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 25(13)2024 Jul 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39000590

RESUMO

Protein cysteine S-glycosylation is a relatively rare and less well characterized post-translational modification (PTM). Creating reliable model proteins that carry this modification is challenging. The lack of available models or natural S-glycosylated proteins significantly hampers the development of mass-spectrometry-based (MS-based) methodologies for detecting protein cysteine S-glycosylation in real-world proteomic studies. There is also limited MS-sequencing data describing it as easier to create synthetic S-glycopeptides. Here, we present the results of an in-depth manual analysis of automatically annotated CID/HCD spectra for model S-glucopeptides. The CID spectra show a long series of y/b-fragment ions with retained S-glucosylation, regardless of the dominant m/z signals corresponding to neutral loss of 1,2-anhydroglucose from the precursor ions. In addition, the spectra show signals manifesting glucosyl transfer from the cysteine position onto lysine, arginine (Lys, Arg) side chains, and a peptide N-terminus. Other spectral evidence indicates that the N-glucosylated initial products of transfer are converted into N-fructosylated (i.e., glycated) structures due to Amadori rearrangement. We discuss the peculiar transfer of the glucose oxocarbenium ion (Glc+) to positively charged guanidinium residue (ArgH+) and propose a mechanism for the gas-phase Amadori rearrangement involving a 1,2-hydride ion shift.


Assuntos
Cisteína , Glicosilação , Cisteína/química , Cisteína/metabolismo , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Glicopeptídeos/química , Glicopeptídeos/metabolismo , Peptídeos/química , Peptídeos/metabolismo , Gases/metabolismo , Gases/química , Glucose/metabolismo , Glucose/química , Proteômica/métodos , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem/métodos
2.
Amino Acids ; 55(1): 61-74, 2023 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36460841

RESUMO

Some glycoproteins contain carbohydrates S-linked to cysteine (Cys) residues. However, relatively few S-glycosylated proteins have been detected, due to the lack of an effective research methodology. This work outlines a general concept for the detection of S-glycosylation sites in proteins. The approach was verified by exploratory experiments on a model mixture of ß-S-glucosylated polypeptides obtained by the chemical transformation of lysozyme P00698. The model underwent two processes: (1) oxidative hydrolysis of S-glycosidic bonds under alkaline conditions to expose the thiol group of Cys residues; (2) thiol S-alkylation leading to thiol S-adduct formation at the former S-glycosylation sites. Oxidative hydrolysis was conducted in aqueous urea, dimethyl sulfoxide, or trifluoroethanol, with silver nitrate as the reaction promoter, in the presence of triethylamine and/or pyridine. The concurrent formation of stable protein silver thiolates, gluconic acid, and silver nanoclusters was observed. The essential de-metalation of protein silver thiolates using dithiothreitol preceded the S-labeling of Cys residues with 4-vinyl pyridine or a fluorescent reagent. The S-labeled model was sequenced by tandem mass spectrometry to obtain data on the modifications and their distribution over the protein chains. This enabled the efficiency of both S-glycosidic bonds hydrolysis and S-glycosylation site labeling to be evaluated. Suggestions are also given for testing this novel strategy on real proteomic samples.


Assuntos
Cisteína , Proteína S , Glicosilação , Cisteína/química , Proteína S/metabolismo , Glicosídeos , Hidrólise , Proteômica/métodos , Proteínas/química , Estresse Oxidativo
3.
Amino Acids ; 51(9): 1365-1375, 2019 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31471744

RESUMO

The regulatory role of protein cysteine phosphorylation is an under-researched area. The difficulty of accessing reference S-phosphorylated peptides (pCys-peptides) hampers progress in MS-driven cysteine phosphoproteomics, which requires targeted analytical procedures. This work describes an uncomplicated process for the conversion of disulfide-bridged protein into a complex model mixture of combinatorially modified peptides. Hen egg-white lysozyme was reduced with tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) followed by alkylation of cysteine with (3-acrylamidopropyl)trimethyl-ammonium chloride (APTA) and subsequent beta-elimination in aqueous Ba(OH)2 to yield modified polypeptides containing multiple dehydroalanine (Dha) residues. The conjugate addition of thiophosphoric acid to Dha residues followed by trypsinolysis led to numerous D/L phosphocysteine-containing peptides, which were identified by higher-energy collisional-dissociation tandem mass spectrometry (HCD-MS/MS). Our results show that some pCys-peptides produce prominent neutral losses of 80 Da, 98 Da and a weak 116 Da loss. These are similar to the neutral-loss triplets generated by phosphohistidine peptides.


Assuntos
Cisteína/química , Fosfopeptídeos/normas , Proteômica/métodos , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem/normas , Alquilação , Dissulfetos/química , Muramidase/química , Peptídeos/síntese química , Peptídeos/química , Fosfopeptídeos/química , Proteínas/química , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem/métodos
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