Co-reporter:Fang Liu, He Meng, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of Proteome Research September 1, 2017 Volume 16(Issue 9) pp:3277-3277
Publication Date(Web):July 3, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.7b00283
Proteomic methods for disease state characterization and biomarker discovery have traditionally utilized quantitative mass spectrometry methods to identify proteins with altered expression levels in disease states. Here we report on the large-scale use of protein folding stability measurements to characterize different subtypes of breast cancer using the stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture and stability of proteins from rates of oxidation (SILAC-SPROX) technique. Protein folding stability differences were studied in a comparison of two luminal breast cancer subtypes, luminal-A and -B (i.e., MCF-7 and BT-474 cells, respectively), and in a comparison of a luminal-A and basal subtype of the disease (i.e., MCF-7 and MDA-MB-468 cells, respectively). The 242 and 445 protein hits identified with altered stabilities in these comparative analyses included a large fraction with no significant expression level changes. This suggests thermodynamic stability measurements create a new avenue for protein biomarker discovery. A number of the identified protein hits are known from other biochemical studies to play a role in tumorigenesis and cancer progression. This not only substantiates the biological significance of the protein hits identified using the SILAC-SPROX approach, but it also helps elucidate the molecular basis for their disregulation and/or disfunction in cancer.Keywords: BT-474; chemical denaturation; MCF-7; MDA-MB-468; protein folding;
Co-reporter:Ryenne N. Ogburn, Lorrain Jin, He Meng, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of Proteome Research November 3, 2017 Volume 16(Issue 11) pp:4073-4073
Publication Date(Web):September 19, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.7b00442
The proteins in an MCF-7 cell line were probed for tamoxifen (TAM) and n-desmethyl tamoxifen (NDT) induced stability changes using the Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SPROX) technique in combination with two different quantitative proteomics strategies, including one based on SILAC and one based on isobaric mass tags. Over 1000 proteins were assayed for TAM- and NDT-induced protein stability changes, and a total of 163 and 200 protein hits were identified in the TAM and NDT studies, respectively. A subset of 27 high-confidence protein hits were reproducibly identified with both proteomics strategies and/or with multiple peptide probes. One-third of the high-confidence hits have previously established experimental links to the estrogen receptor, and nearly all of the high-confidence hits have established links to breast cancer. One high-confidence protein hit that has known estrogen receptor binding properties, Y-box binding protein 1 (YBX1), was further validated as a direct binding target of TAM using both the SPROX and pulse proteolysis techniques. Proteins with TAM- and/or NDT-induced expression level changes were also identified in the SILAC-SPROX experiments. These proteins with expression level changes included only a small fraction of those with TAM- and/or NDT-induced stability changes.Keywords: chemical denaturation; iTRAQ; mass spectrometry; mode of action; off-target; proteomics; pulse proteolysis; SILAC; SPROX; Y-Box binding protein 1;
Co-reporter:Lorrain Jin, Dongyu Wang, David M. Gooden, Carol H. Ball, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Analytical Chemistry 2016 Volume 88(Issue 22) pp:10987
Publication Date(Web):October 14, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.6b02658
The characterization of protein folding stability changes on the proteomic scale is useful for protein-target discovery and for the characterization of biological states. The Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SPROX) technique is one of several mass spectrometry-based techniques recently established for the making proteome-wide measurements of protein folding and stability. A critical part of proteome-wide applications of SPROX is the identification and quantitation of methionine-containing peptides. Demonstrated here is a targeted mass spectrometry-based proteomics strategy for the detection and quantitation of methionine-containing peptides in SPROX experiments. The strategy involves the use of phenacyl bromide (PAB) for the targeted detection and quantitation of methionine-containing peptides in SPROX using selective reaction monitoring (SRM) on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (QQQ-MS). As proof-of-principle, the known binding interaction of Cyclosporine A with cyclophilin A protein in a yeast cell lysate is successfully detected and quantified using a targeted SRM workflow. Advantages of the described workflow over other SPROX protocols include a 20-fold reduction in the amount of total protein needed for analysis and the ability to work with the endogenous proteins in a given sample (e.g., stabile isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture is not necessary).
Co-reporter:M. Ariel Geer Wallace; Do-Yeon Kwon; Douglas H. Weitzel; Chen-Ting Lee; Tesia N. Stephenson; Jen-Tsan Chi; Robert A. MookJr.; Mark W. Dewhirst; Jiyong Hong
Journal of Proteome Research 2016 Volume 15(Issue 8) pp:2688-2696
Publication Date(Web):June 20, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00237
Manassantin A is a natural product that has been shown to have anticancer activity in cell-based assays, but has a largely unknown mode-of-action. Described here is the use of two different energetics-based approaches to identify protein targets of manassantin A. Using the stability of proteins from rates of oxidation technique with an isobaric mass tagging strategy (iTRAQ-SPROX) and the pulse proteolysis technique with a stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture strategy (SILAC-PP), over 1000 proteins in a MDA-MB-231 cell lysate grown under hypoxic conditions were assayed for manassantin A interactions (both direct and indirect). A total of 28 protein hits were identified with manassantin A-induced thermodynamic stability changes. Two of the protein hits (filamin A and elongation factor 1α) were identified using both experimental approaches. The remaining 26 hit proteins were only assayed in either the iTRAQ-SPROX or the SILAC-PP experiment. The 28 potential protein targets of manassantin A identified here provide new experimental avenues along which to explore the molecular basis of manassantin A’s mode of action. The current work also represents the first application iTRAQ-SPROX and SILAC-PP to the large-scale analysis of protein–ligand binding interactions involving a potential anticancer drug with an unknown mode-of-action.
Co-reporter:Fang Liu and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of Proteome Research 2016 Volume 15(Issue 12) pp:4666-4674
Publication Date(Web):October 30, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00755
Conformational changes in proteins can lead to disease. Thus, methods for identifying conformational changes in proteins can further improve our understanding and facilitate detection of disease states. Here we combine limited proteolysis (LiP) with Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino Acids in Cell Culture (SILAC) to characterize breast cancer-related conformational changes in proteins on the proteomic scale. Studied here are the conformational properties of proteins in two cell culture models of breast cancer, including the MCF-10A and MCF-7 cell lines. The SILAC-LiP approach described here identified ∼200 proteins with cell-line-dependent conformational changes, as determined by their differential susceptibility to proteolytic digestion using the nonspecific protease, proteinase K. The protease susceptibility profiles of the proteins in these cell lines were compared to thermodynamic stability and expression level profiles previously generated for proteins in these same breast cancer cell lines. The comparisons revealed that there was little overlap between the proteins with protease susceptibility changes and the proteins with thermodynamic stability and/or expression level changes. Thus, the large-scale conformational analysis described here provides unique insight into the molecular basis of the breast cancer phenotypes in this study.Keywords: breast cancer; limited proteolysis; mass spectrometry; MCF-10A; MCF-7; protein folding; proteomics; SILAC;
Co-reporter:Julia H. Roberts, Fang Liu, Jaret M. Karnuta, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of Proteome Research 2016 Volume 15(Issue 12) pp:4731-4741
Publication Date(Web):November 2, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00927
Described here is the application of thermodynamic stability measurements to study age-related differences in the folding and stability of proteins in a rodent model of aging. Thermodynamic stability profiles were generated for 809 proteins in brain cell lysates from mice, aged 6 (n = 7) and 18 months (n = 9) using the Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SPROX) technique. The biological variability of the protein stability measurements was low and within the experimental error of SPROX. A total of 83 protein hits were detected with age-related stability differences in the brain samples. Remarkably, the large majority of the brain protein hits were destabilized in the old mice, and the hits were enriched in proteins that have slow turnover rates (p < 0.07). Furthermore, 70% of the hits have been previously linked to aging or age-related diseases. These results help validate the use of thermodynamic stability measurements to capture relevant age-related proteomic changes and establish a new biophysical link between these proteins and aging.Keywords: aging; chemical denaturation; iTRAQ; mass spectrometry; proteomics; SPROX;
Co-reporter:M. Ariel Geer
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2016 Volume 27( Issue 2) pp:233-243
Publication Date(Web):2016 February
DOI:10.1007/s13361-015-1290-z
The stability of proteins from rates of oxidation (SPROX) technique was used in combination with an isobaric mass tagging strategy to identify adenosine triphosphate (ATP) interacting proteins in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteome. The SPROX methodology utilized in this work enabled 373 proteins in a yeast cell lysate to be assayed for ATP interactions (both direct and indirect) using the non-hydrolyzable ATP analog, adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP). A total of 28 proteins were identified with AMP-PNP-induced thermodynamic stability changes. These protein hits included 14 proteins that were previously annotated as ATP-binding proteins in the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD). The 14 non-annotated ATP-binding proteins included nine proteins that were previously found to be ATP-sensitive in an earlier SPROX study using a stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC)-based approach. A bioinformatics analysis of the protein hits identified here and in the earlier SILAC-SPROX experiments revealed that many of the previously annotated ATP-binding protein hits were kinases, ligases, and chaperones. In contrast, many of the newly discovered ATP-sensitive proteins were not from these protein classes, but rather were hydrolases, oxidoreductases, and nucleic acid-binding proteins.
Co-reporter:Yingrong Xu;M. Ariel Geer Wallace
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2016 Volume 27( Issue 10) pp:1670-1676
Publication Date(Web):2016 October
DOI:10.1007/s13361-016-1457-2
Geldanamycin is a natural product with well-established and potent anti-cancer activities. Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) is the known target of geldanamycin, which directly binds to Hsp90’s N-terminal ATP binding domain and inhibits Hsp90’s ATPase activity. The affinity of geldanamycin for Hsp90 has been measured in multiple studies. However, there have been large discrepancies between the reported dissociation constants (i.e., Kd values), which have ranged from low nanomolar to micromolar. Here the stability of proteins from rates of oxidation (SPROX) technique was used in combination with an isobaric mass tagging strategy to measure the binding affinity of geldanamycin to unpurified Hsp90 in an MCF-7 cell lysate. The Kd values determined here were dependent on how long geldanamycin was equilibrated with the lysate prior to SPROX analysis. The Kd values determined using equilibration times of 0.5 and 24 h were 1 and 0.03 μM, respectively. These Kd values, which are similar to those previously reported in a geldanamycin–Hsp90 binding study that involved the use of a fluorescently labeled geldanamycin analogue, establish that the slow-tight binding behavior previously observed for the fluorescently labeled geldanamycin analogue is not an artifact of the fluorescent label, but rather an inherent property of the geldanamycin–Hsp90 binding interaction. The slow-tight binding property of this complex may be related to time-dependent conformational changes in Hsp90 and/or to time-dependent chemical changes in geldanamycin, both of which have been previously proposed to explain the slow-tight binding behavior of the geldanamycin–Hsp90 complex.
Co-reporter:Jagat Adhikari; Graham M. West
Journal of Proteome Research 2015 Volume 14(Issue 5) pp:2287-2297
Publication Date(Web):March 31, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.5b00057
Current methods for the large-scale characterization of disease states generally rely on the analysis of gene and/or protein expression levels. These existing methods fail to detect proteins with disease-related functions and unaltered expression levels. Here we describe the large-scale use of thermodynamic measurements of protein folding and stability for the characterization of disease states. Using the Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino Acids in Cell Culture and Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SILAC-SPROX) technique, we assayed ∼800 proteins for protein folding and stability changes in three different cell culture models of breast cancer including the MCF-10A, MCF-7, and MDA-MB-231 cell lines. The thermodynamic stability profiles generated here created distinct molecular markers to differentiate the three cell lines, and a significant fraction (∼45%) of the differentially stabilized proteins did not have altered expression levels. Thus, the differential thermodynamic profiling strategy reported here created novel molecular signatures of breast cancer and provided additional insight into the molecular basis of the disease. Our results establish the utility of protein folding and stability measurements for the study of disease processes, and they suggest that such measurements may be useful for biomarker discovery in disease.
Co-reporter:Yingrong Xu, Erin C. Strickland, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Analytical Chemistry 2014 Volume 86(Issue 14) pp:7041
Publication Date(Web):June 4, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ac501278j
Described here is the development of a mass spectrometry-based covalent labeling protocol that utilizes the reaction of dimethyl(2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl)sulfonium bromide (HNSB) with tryptophan (Trp) residues to measure protein folding free energies (ΔGf values). In the protocol, the chemical denaturant dependence of the rate at which globally protected Trp residues in a protein react with HNSB is evaluated using either a matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight analysis of the intact protein or a quantitative, bottom-up proteomics analysis using isobaric mass tags. In the proof-of-principle studies performed here, the protocol yielded accurate ΔGf values for the two-state folding proteins, lysozyme and cytochrome c. The protocol also yielded an accurate measure of the dissociation constant (Kd value) for the binding of N,N′,N″-triacetylchitotriose to lysozyme, and it successfully detected the binding of brinzolamide to BCA II, a non-two-state folding protein. The HNSB protocol can be used in combination with SPROX (stability of proteins from rates of oxidation), a previously reported technique that exploits the hydrogen peroxide oxidation of methionine (Met) residues in proteins to make ΔGf value measurements. Incorporating the HNSB protocol into SPROX increased the peptide and protein coverage in proteome-wide SPROX experiments by 50% and 25%, respectively. As part of this work, the precision of proteome-wide ΔGf value measurements using the combined HNSB and SPROX protocol is also evaluated.
Co-reporter:Jagat Adhikari
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2014 Volume 25( Issue 12) pp:2073-2083
Publication Date(Web):2014 December
DOI:10.1007/s13361-014-0992-y
Reported here is the use of stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) and pulse proteolysis (PP) for detection and quantitation of protein–ligand binding interactions on the proteomic scale. The incorporation of SILAC into PP enables the PP technique to be used for the unbiased detection and quantitation of protein–ligand binding interactions in complex biological mixtures (e.g., cell lysates) without the need for prefractionation. The SILAC-PP technique is demonstrated in two proof-of-principle experiments using proteins in a yeast cell lysate and two test ligands including a well-characterized drug, cyclosporine A (CsA), and a non-hydrolyzable adenosine triphosphate (ATP) analogue, adenylyl imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP). The well-known tight-binding interaction between CsA and cyclophilin A was successfully detected and quantified in replicate analyses, and a total of 33 proteins from a yeast cell lysate were found to have AMP-PNP-induced stability changes. In control experiments, the method’s false positive rate of protein target discovery was found to be in the range of 2.1% to 3.6%. SILAC-PP and the previously reported stability of protein from rates of oxidation (SPROX) technique both report on the same thermodynamic properties of proteins and protein–ligand complexes. However, they employ different probes and mass spectrometry-based readouts. This creates the opportunity to cross-validate SPROX results with SILAC-PP results, and vice-versa. As part of this work, the SILAC-PP results obtained here were cross-validated with previously reported SPROX results on the same model systems to help differentiate true positives from false positives in the two experiments.
Co-reporter:Erin C. Strickland;M. Ariel Geer
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2014 Volume 25( Issue 1) pp:132-140
Publication Date(Web):2014 January
DOI:10.1007/s13361-013-0754-2
Detection and quantitation of protein–ligand binding interactions is important in many areas of biological research. Stability of proteins from rates of oxidation (SPROX) is an energetics-based technique for identifying the proteins targets of ligands in complex biological mixtures. Knowing the false-positive rate of protein target discovery in proteome-wide SPROX experiments is important for the correct interpretation of results. Reported here are the results of a control SPROX experiment in which chemical denaturation data is obtained on the proteins in two samples that originated from the same yeast lysate, as would be done in a typical SPROX experiment except that one sample would be spiked with the test ligand. False-positive rates of 1.2-2.2 % and <0.8 % are calculated for SPROX experiments using Q-TOF and Orbitrap mass spectrometer systems, respectively. Our results indicate that the false-positive rate is largely determined by random errors associated with the mass spectral analysis of the isobaric mass tag (e.g., iTRAQ®) reporter ions used for peptide quantitation. Our results also suggest that technical replicates can be used to effectively eliminate such false positives that result from this random error, as is demonstrated in a SPROX experiment to identify yeast protein targets of the drug, manassantin A. The impact of ion purity in the tandem mass spectral analyses and of background oxidation on the false-positive rate of protein target discovery using SPROX is also discussed.
Co-reporter:Ying Xu, Irene N. Falk, Mark A. Hallen, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Analytical Chemistry 2011 Volume 83(Issue 9) pp:3555
Publication Date(Web):April 1, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ac200211t
Described here is a mass spectrometry-based covalent labeling protocol that utilizes the amine reactive reagent, s-methyl thioacetimidate (SMTA), to study the chemical denaturant-induced equilibrium unfolding/refolding properties of proteins and protein−ligand complexes in solution. The protocol, which involves evaluating the rate at which globally protected amine groups in a protein are modified with SMTA as a function of chemical denaturant concentration, is developed and applied to the analysis of eight protein samples including six purified protein samples (ubiquitin, BCAII, RNaseA, 4OT, and lysozyme with, and without GlcNAc), a five-protein mixture comprised of ubiquitin, BCAII, RNaseA, Cytochrome C, and lysozyme, and a yeast cell lysate. In ideal cases the folding free energies of proteins and the dissociation constants of protein−ligand complexes can be accurately evaluated using the protocol. A direct MALDI-TOF readout is demonstrated for analysis of purified protein samples. Bottom-up proteomic strategies involving gel-based and/or LC-MS-based shotgun proteomic platforms are also demonstrated for the analyses of complex protein samples. Analysis of proteins in a yeast cell lysate suggests the SMTA-labeling protocol expands the peptide and protein coverage in chemical modification- and shotgun proteomics-based strategies for making thermodynamic measurements of protein folding and stability on the proteomic scale.
Co-reporter:Patrick D. DeArmond, Ying Xu, Erin C. Strickland, Kyle G. Daniels, and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of Proteome Research 2011 Volume 10(Issue 11) pp:4948-4958
Publication Date(Web):2017-2-22
DOI:10.1021/pr200403c
Shotgun proteomics protocols are widely used for the identification and/or quantitation of proteins in complex biological samples. Described here is a shotgun proteomics protocol that can be used to identify the protein targets of biologically relevant ligands in complex protein mixtures. The protocol combines a quantitative proteomics platform with a covalent modification strategy, termed Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SPROX), which utilizes the denaturant dependence of hydrogen peroxide-mediated oxidation of methionine side chains in proteins to assess the thermodynamic properties of proteins and protein–ligand complexes. The quantitative proteomics platform involves the use of isobaric mass tags and a methionine-containing peptide enhancement strategy. The protocol is evaluated in a ligand binding experiment designed to identify the proteins in a yeast cell lysate that bind the well-known enzyme cofactor, β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). The protocol is also used to investigate the protein targets of resveratrol, a biologically active ligand with less well-understood protein targets. A known protein target of resveratrol, cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase, was identified in addition to six other potential new proteins targets including four that are associated with the protein translation machinery, which has previously been implicated as a target of resveratrol.
Co-reporter:Patrick D. DeArmond;Graham M. West
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2011 Volume 22( Issue 3) pp:418-430
Publication Date(Web):2011 March
DOI:10.1007/s13361-010-0060-1
Described here is a stable isotope labeling protocol that can be used with a chemical modification- and mass spectrometry-based protein–ligand binding assay for detecting and quantifying both the direct and indirect binding events that result from protein–ligand binding interactions. The protocol utilizes an H216O2 and H218O2 labeling strategy to evaluate the chemical denaturant dependence of methionine oxidation in proteins both in the presence and absence of a target ligand. The differential denaturant dependence to the oxidation reactions performed in the presence and absence of ligand provides a measure of the protein stability changes that occur as a result of direct interactions of proteins with the target ligand and/or as a result of indirect interactions involving other protein–ligand interactions that are either induced or disrupted by the ligand. The described protocol utilizes the 18O/16O ratio in the oxidized protein samples to quantify the ligand-induced protein stability changes. The ratio is determined using the isotopic distributions observed for the methionine-containing peptides used for protein identification in the LC-MS-based proteomics readout. The strategy is applied to a multi-component protein mixture in this proof-of-principle experiment, which was designed to evaluate the technique’s ability to detect and quantify the direct binding interaction between cyclosporin A and cyclophilin A and to detect the indirect binding interaction between cyclosporin A and calcineurin (i.e., the protein–protein interaction between cyclophilin A and calcineurin that is induced by cyclosporin A binding to cyclophilin A).
Co-reporter:Ying Xu, Sebastian Schmitt, Liangjie Tang, Ursula Jakob and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 6) pp:
Publication Date(Web):January 14, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi902010t
Molecular chaperones are a highly diverse group of proteins that recognize and bind unfolded proteins to facilitate protein folding and prevent nonspecific protein aggregation. The mechanisms by which chaperones bind their protein substrates have been studied for decades. However, there are few reports about the affinity of molecular chaperones for their unfolded protein substrates. Thus, little is known about the relative binding affinities of different chaperones and about the relative binding affinities of chaperones for different unfolded protein substrates. Here we describe the application of SUPREX (stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H−D exchange), an H−D exchange and MALDI-based technique, in studying the binding interaction between the molecular chaperone Hsp33 and four different unfolded protein substrates, including citrate synthase, lactate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, and aldolase. The results of our studies suggest that the cooperativity of the Hsp33 folding−unfolding reaction increases upon binding with denatured protein substrates. This is consistent with the burial of significant hydrophobic surface area in Hsp33 when it interacts with its substrate proteins. The SUPREX-derived Kd values for Hsp33 complexes with four different substrates were all found to be within the range of 3−300 nM.
Co-reporter:Graham M. West;Chandra L. Tucker;Tao Xu;Sung Kyu Park;Xuemei Han;John R. Yates III
PNAS 2010 Volume 107 (Issue 20 ) pp:9078-9082
Publication Date(Web):2010-05-18
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1000148107
Knowledge about the protein targets of therapeutic agents is critical for understanding drug mode of action. Described here
is a mass spectrometry-based proteomics method for identifying the protein target(s) of drug molecules that is potentially
applicable to any drug compound. The method, which involves making thermodynamic measurements of protein-folding reactions
in complex biological mixtures to detect protein–drug interactions, is demonstrated in an experiment to identify yeast protein
targets of the immunosuppressive drug, cyclosporin A (CsA). Two of the ten protein targets identified in this proof of principle
work were cyclophilin A and UDP-glucose-4-epimerase, both of which are known to interact with CsA, the former through a direct
binding event (Kd ∼ 70 nM) and the latter through an indirect binding event. These two previously known protein targets validate the methodology
and its ability to detect both the on- and off-target effects of protein–drug interactions. The other eight protein targets
discovered here, which include several proteins involved in glucose metabolism, create a new framework in which to investigate
the molecular basis of CsA side effects in humans.
Co-reporter:Erin D. Hopper, Adrianne M. C. Pittman, Chandra L. Tucker, Michael J. Campa, Edward F. Patz Jr. and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Analytical Chemistry 2009 Volume 81(Issue 16) pp:6860
Publication Date(Web):July 20, 2009
DOI:10.1021/ac900854t
A protease digestion strategy was incorporated into single-point stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H/D exchange (SUPREX), which is a hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange- and mass spectrometry-based assay for the detection of protein−ligand binding. Single-point SUPREX is an abbreviated form of SUPREX in which protein−ligand binding interactions are detected by measuring the increase in a protein’s thermodynamic stability upon ligand binding. The new protease digestion protocol provides a noteworthy increase in the efficiency of single-point SUPREX because peptide masses can be determined with greater precision than intact protein masses in the matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) readout of single-point SUPREX. The protocol was evaluated in test screens on two model protein systems, including cyclophilin A (CypA) and the minor allele variant of human alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGTmi). The test screening results obtained on both proteins revealed that the peptide readout of the single-point SUPREX-protease digestion protocol was more efficient than the intact protein readout of the original single-point SUPREX protocol at discriminating hits and nonhits. In addition to this improvement in screening efficiency, the protease digestion strategy described here is expected to significantly increase the generality of the single-point SUPREX assay.
Co-reporter:Claire J. Parker Siburt, Petra L. Roulhac, Katherine D. Weaver, Jennifer M. Noto, Timothy A. Mietzner, Cynthia N. Cornelissen, Michael C. Fitzgerald and Alvin L. Crumbliss
Metallomics 2009 vol. 1(Issue 3) pp:249-255
Publication Date(Web):09 Apr 2009
DOI:10.1039/B902860A
Neisseria gonorrhoeae has the capacity to acquire iron from its human host by removing this essential nutrient from serum transferrin. The transferrin binding proteins, TbpA and TbpB, constitute the outer membrane receptor complex responsible for binding transferrin, extracting the tightly bound iron from the host-derived molecule, and transporting iron into the periplasmic space of this Gram-negative bacterium. Once iron is transported across the outer membrane, ferric binding protein A (FbpA) moves the iron across the periplasmic space and initiates the process of transport into the bacterial cytosol. The results of the studies reported here define the multiple steps in the iron transport process in which TbpA and TbpB participate. Using the SUPREX technique for assessing the thermodynamic stability of protein–ligand complexes, we report herein the first direct measurement of periplasmic FbpA binding to the outer membrane protein TbpA. We also show that TbpA discriminates between apo- and holo-FbpA; i.e. the TbpA interaction with apo-FbpA is higher affinity than the TbpA interaction with holo-FbpA. Further, we demonstrate that both TbpA and TbpB individually can deferrate transferrin without energy supplied from TonB resulting in sequestration by apo-FbpA.
Co-reporter:Michael C. Fitzgerald, Graham M. West
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2009 Volume 20(Issue 6) pp:1193-1206
Publication Date(Web):June 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.jasms.2009.02.006
Knowledge about the structural and biophysical properties of proteins when they are free in solution and/or in complexes with other molecules is essential for understanding the biological processes that proteins regulate. Such knowledge is also important to drug discovery efforts, particularly those focused on the development of therapeutic agents with protein targets. In the last decade a variety of different covalent labeling techniques have been used in combination with mass spectrometry to probe the solution-phase structures and biophysical properties of proteins and protein–ligand complexes. Highlighted here are five different mass spectrometry–based covalent labeling strategies including: continuous hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange labeling, hydroxyl radical-mediated footprinting, SUPREX (stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H/D exchange), PLIMSTEX (protein–ligand interaction by mass spectrometry, titration, and H/D exchange), and SPROX (stability of proteins from rates of oxidation). The basic experimental protocols used in each of the above-cited methods are summarized along with the kind of biophysical information they generate. Also discussed are the relative strengths and weaknesses of the different methods for probing the wide range of conformational states that proteins and protein–ligand complexes can adopt when they are in solution.Here we compare and contrast five different mass spectrometry–based protocols involving the use of amide H/D exchange and protein oxidation for the conformational analysis of proteins and protein–ligand complexes.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (125 K)Download as PowerPoint slide
Co-reporter:Graham M. West, Liangjie Tang and Michael C. Fitzgerald
Analytical Chemistry 2008 Volume 80(Issue 11) pp:4175
Publication Date(Web):May 6, 2008
DOI:10.1021/ac702610a
Described here is a new technique, termed SPROX (stability of proteins from rates of oxidation), that can be used to measure the thermodynamic stability of proteins and protein−ligand complexes. SPROX utilizes hydrogen peroxide in the presence of increasing concentrations of a chemical denaturant to oxidize proteins. The extent of oxidation at a given oxidation time is determined as a function of the denaturant concentration using either electrospray or matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry. Ultimately, the denaturant concentration dependence of the oxidation reaction rate is used to evaluate a folding free energy (ΔGf) and m value (δΔGf/δ[Den]) for the protein’s folding/unfolding reaction. Measurements of such SPROX-derived ΔGf and m values on proteins in the presence and absence of ligands can also be used to evaluate protein−ligand affinities (e.g., ΔΔGf and Kd values). Presented here are SPROX results obtained on four model protein systems including ubiquitin, ribonuclease A (RNaseA), cyclophilin A (CypA), and bovine carbonic anhydrase II (BCAII). SPROX-derived ΔGf and m values on these proteins are compared to values obtained using more established techniques (e.g., CD spectroscopy and SUPREX). The dissociation constants of several known protein−ligand complexes involving these proteins were also determined using SPROX and compared to previously reported values. The complexes included the CypA−cyclosporin A complex and the BCAII−4-carboxybenzenesulfonamide complex. The accuracy and precision of SPROX-derived thermodynamic parameters for the model proteins and protein−ligand complexes in this study are discussed as well as the caveats of the technique.
Co-reporter:Erin D. Hopper;Petra L. Roulhac
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2008 Volume 19( Issue 9) pp:1303-1311
Publication Date(Web):2008 September
DOI:10.1016/j.jasms.2008.06.007
An H/D exchange- and MALDI mass spectrometry-based screening assay was applied to search for novel ligands that bind to cyclophilin A, a potential therapeutic and diagnostic target in lung cancer. The assay is based on stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H/D exchange (SUPREX), which exploits the H/D exchange properties of amide protons to measure the increase in a protein’s thermodynamic stability upon ligand binding in solution. The current study evaluates the throughput and efficiency with which 880 potential ligands from the Prestwick Chemical Library (Illkirch, France) could be screened for binding to cyclophilin A. Screening was performed at a rate of 3 min/ligand using a conventional MALDI mass spectrometer. False positive and false negative rates, based on a set of control data, were as low as 0% and 9%, respectively. Based on the 880-member library screening, a false positive rate of 0% was observed when a two-tier selection strategy was implemented. Although novel ligands for cyclophilin A were not discovered, cyclosporin A, a known ligand to CypA and a blind control in the library, was identified as a hit. We also describe a new strategy to eliminate some of the complications related to back exchange that can arise in screening applications of SUPREX.
Co-reporter:Susie Y. Dai, Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2006 Volume 17(Issue 11) pp:1535-1542
Publication Date(Web):November 2006
DOI:10.1016/j.jasms.2006.06.025
Described here is the impact of so-called non-EX2 exchange behavior on the accuracy of protein unfolding free energies (i.e., ΔGu values) and m values (i.e.,-δΔGu/δ[denaturant] values) determined by an H/D exchange and mass spectrometry-based technique termed stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H/D exchange (SUPREX). Both experimental and theoretical results on a model protein, ubiquitin, reveal that reasonably accurate thermodynamic parameters for its folding reaction can be determined by SUPREX even when H/D exchange data is collected in a non-EX2 regime. Not surprisingly, the theoretical results reported here on a series of hypothetical protein systems with a wide range of biophysical properties show that the accuracy of SUPREX-derived ΔGu and m values is compromised for many proteins when analyses are performed at high pH (e.g., pH 9) and for selected proteins with specific biophysical parameters (e.g., slow folding rates) when analyses are performed at lower pH. Of more significance is that the experimental and theoretical results reveal a means by which problems with non-EX2 exchange behavior can be detected in the SUPREX experiment without prior knowledge of the protein’s biophysical properties. The results of this work also reveal that such problems with non-EX2 exchange behavior can generally be minimized if appropriate H/D exchange times are employed in the SUPREX experiment to yield SUPREX curve transition midpoints at chemical denaturant concentrations less than 2 M.
Co-reporter:Thomas E. Wales;Min Wang
PNAS 2006 Volume 103 (Issue 8 ) pp:2600-2604
Publication Date(Web):2006-02-21
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0508121103
Backbone–backbone hydrogen-bonding interactions are a ubiquitous and highly conserved structural feature of proteins that
adopt the same fold (i.e., have the same overall backbone topology). This work addresses the question of whether or not this
structural conservation is also reflected as a thermodynamic conservation. Reported here is a comparative thermodynamic analysis
of backbone hydrogen bonds in two proteins that adopt the same fold but are unrelated at the primary amino acid sequence level.
With amide-to-ester bond mutations introduced by total chemical synthesis methods, the thermodynamic consequences of backbone–backbone
hydrogen-bond deletions at five different structurally equivalent positions throughout the β-α-α fold of Arc repressor and
CopG were assessed. The ester bond-containing analogues all folded into native-like three-dimensional structures that were
destabilized from 2.5 to 6.0 kcal/(mol dimer) compared with wild-type controls. Remarkably, the five paired analogues with
amide-to-ester bond mutations at structurally equivalent positions were destabilized to exactly the same degree, regardless
of the degree to which the mutation site was buried in the structure. The results are interpreted as evidence that the thermodynamics
of backbone–backbone hydrogen-bonding interactions in a protein fold are conserved.
Co-reporter:Erin D. Hopper, Petra L. Roulhac, Michael J. Campa, Edward F. Patz Jr., Michael C. Fitzgerald
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (September 2008) Volume 19(Issue 9) pp:1303-1311
Publication Date(Web):1 September 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.jasms.2008.06.007
An H/D exchange- and MALDI mass spectrometry-based screening assay was applied to search for novel ligands that bind to cyclophilin A, a potential therapeutic and diagnostic target in lung cancer. The assay is based on stability of unpurified proteins from rates of H/D exchange (SUPREX), which exploits the H/D exchange properties of amide protons to measure the increase in a protein's thermodynamic stability upon ligand binding in solution. The current study evaluates the throughput and efficiency with which 880 potential ligands from the Prestwick Chemical Library (Illkirch, France) could be screened for binding to cyclophilin A. Screening was performed at a rate of 3 min/ligand using a conventional MALDI mass spectrometer. False positive and false negative rates, based on a set of control data, were as low as 0% and 9%, respectively. Based on the 880-member library screening, a false positive rate of 0% was observed when a two-tier selection strategy was implemented. Although novel ligands for cyclophilin A were not discovered, cyclosporin A, a known ligand to CypA and a blind control in the library, was identified as a hit. We also describe a new strategy to eliminate some of the complications related to back exchange that can arise in screening applications of SUPREX.Protein–ligand binding is detected in a high throughput manner by monitoring the change in mass of a protein upon H/D exchange in a denaturant-containing buffer.Download high-res image (105KB)Download full-size image