4.8 Article

Affinity Purification of Methyllysine Proteome by Site-Specific Covalent Conjugation

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 90, Issue 23, Pages 13876-13881

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.8b02796

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institute of Health Research
  2. Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada
  3. University Grants Committee of Hong Kong [14304915, 14321116, 14306317, AoE/M-09/12]
  4. Food and Health Bureau [HMRF 15140052]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21628201]
  6. CUHK [4053110, 3132686, 3132687, 3132235, 3132238]
  7. Shenzhen Science and Technology Program [20170407162100014]
  8. Research Grant Council of Hong Kong [21101917]

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A basic but critical step in targeted proteomics by mass spectrometry is the separation of the targeted proteins from the complex mixture of the whole proteome by affinity purification. The bait protein is usually immobilized on the surface of a solid support to enable affinity-based purification of the targeted proteome. Here, we developed a site-specific covalent immobilization of the bait protein through affinity-guided covalent coupling (AGCC) of a single cysteine residue of an SH2 domain (utilized as an affinity tag for the protein target) with an engineered ligand peptide. Site-specific covalent immobilization of a methyllysine-binding protein HP1 beta chromodomain on the agarose resin was used to purify the methyllysine proteome from the whole-protein mixture. This new bait immobilization led to a notably low background in the affinity purification step, markedly outperforming the conventional (His)(6) tag-nickel nitrilotriacetic acid (Ni-NTA) immobilization method. Subsequent analysis of the purified proteome identified 275 lysine methylated sites and 184 methylated proteins from 332 HP1 beta CD-binding proteins, including 30 novel methylated proteins. This work demonstrates that a robust site-specific covalent protein immobilization method is well-suited for proteomic analysis of low-abundance proteins. This method also enables the identification of new methylated proteins and methylation sites in the methyllysine proteome.

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