4.7 Article

Identification of c-Src tyrosine kinase substrates using mass spectrometry and peptide microarrays

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages 3900-3910

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr800198w

Keywords

phosphorylation; SILAC; PDGF; quantitative mass spectrometry; systems biology

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CA106424, U54 RR020839]
  2. Department of Defense Era of Hope Scholar award [W81XWH-06-1-0428]
  3. Beckman Young Investigator award
  4. National Cancer Institute [1130 CA06973-44]

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c-Src tyrosine kinase plays a critical role in signal transduction downstream of growth factor receptors, integrins and G protein-coupled receptors. We used stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) approach to identify additional substrates of c-Src tyrosine kinase in human embryonic kidney 293T cells. We have identified 10 known substrates and interactors of c-Src and Src family kinases along with 26 novel substrates. We have experimentally validated 4 of the novel proteins (NICE-4, RNA binding motif 10, FUSE-binding protein 1 and TRK-fused gene) as direct substrates of c-Src using in vitro kinase assays and cotransfection experiments. Significantly, using a c-Src specific inhibitor, we were also able to implicate 3 novel substrates (RNA binding motif 10, EWS1 and Bcl-2 associated transcription factor) in PDGF signaling. Finally, to identify the exact tyrosine residues that are phosphorylated by c-Src on the novel c-Src substrates, we designed custom peptide microarrays containing all possible tyrosine-containing peptides (312 unique peptides) and their mutant counterparts containing a Tyr --> Phe substitution from 14 of the identified substrates. Using this platform, we identified 34 peptides that are phosphorylated by c-Src. We have demonstrated that SILAC-based quantitative proteomics approach is suitable for identification of substrates of nonreceptor tyrosine kinases and can be coupled with peptide microarrays for high-throughput identification of substrate phosphopeptides.

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