4.7 Article

Mass Spectrometric Analysis of Synapsins in Drosophila melanogaster and Identification of Novel Phosphorylation Sites

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 541-550

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr100746s

Keywords

Drosophila melanogaster; synapsin; immunoprecipitation; mass spectrometry; phosphorylation; UAG suppression; post-translational modification

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB554/A2, SFB581/B21]

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Synapsins are synaptic vesicle-associated phosphoproteins that play a major role in the fine regulation of neurotransmitter release. In Drosophila, synapsins are required for complex behavior including learning and memory. Synapsin isoforms were immunoprecipitated from homogenates of wild-type Drosophila heads using monoclonal antibody 3C11. Synapsin null mutants (Syn(97)) served as negative controls. The eluted proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and visualized by silver staining. Gel pieces picked from five bands specific for wild type were analyzed by nano-LC-ESI-MS/MS following multienzyme digestion (trypsin, chymotrypsin, AspN, subtilisin, pepsin, and proteinase K). The protein was unambiguously identified with high sequence coverage (90.83%). A number of sequence conflicts were observed and the N-terminal amino acid was identified as methionine rather than leucine expected from the cDNA sequence. Several peptides from the larger isoform demonstrated that the in-frame UAG stop codon at position 582 which separates two large open reading frames is read through by tRNAs for lysine. Seven novel phosphorylation sites in Drosophila synapsin were identified at Thr-86, Ser-87, Ser-464, Thr-466, Ser-538, Ser-961, and Tyr-982 and verified by phosphatase treatment. No phosphorylation was observed at the conserved PKA/CaM kinase-I/IV site (RRFS, edited to RGFS) in domain A or a potential PKA site near domain E.

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