4.7 Article

Generation of acetyllysine antibodies and affinity enrichment of acetylated peptides

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 5, Issue 9, Pages 1583-1595

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2010.117

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chinese Ministry of Education
  2. State Key Development Program of Basic Research of China [2009CB918401, 2009CB918600, 2006CB806700]
  3. National High Technology Research and Development Program of China [2006AA02A308]
  4. Chinese National Science Foundation [30971485/C0706, 30600112, 30871255]
  5. Shanghai Key Project for Basic Research, China [09JC1402300, 07PJ14011, 08JC1400900]

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Lysine acetylation has emerged as one of the major post-translational modifications, as indicated by its roles in chromatin remodeling, activation of transcription factors and, most recently, regulation of metabolic enzymes. Identification of acetylation sites in a protein is the first essential step for functional characterization of acetylation in physiological regulation. However, the study of the acetylome is hindered by the lack of suitable physical and biochemical properties of the acetyl group and existence of high-abundance acetylated histones in the cell, and needs a robust method to overcome these problems. Here we present protocols for (i) using chemically acetylated ovalbumin and synthetic acetylated peptide to generate a pan-acetyllysine antibody and a site-specific antibody to Lys288-acetylated argininosuccinate lyase, respectively; (ii) using subcellular fractionation to reduce highly abundant acetylated histones; and (iii) using acetyllysine antibody affinity purification and mass spectrometry to characterize acetylome of human liver tissue. The entire characterization procedure takes similar to 2-3 d to complete.

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