4.7 Article

A Workflow towards the Reproducible Identification and Quantitation of Protein Carbonylation Sites in Human Plasma

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10030369

Keywords

protein carbonylation; human plasma; aldehyde reactive probe (ARP); biotin-avidin affinity; LC-MS; MS

Funding

  1. EU H2020 MSCA ITN MASSTRPLAN [675132]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [INST 268/387-1]
  3. European Fund for Regional Structure Development [100193542]

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Protein carbonylation, a marker of oxidative stress, has been studied in the context of human diseases. A method using ARP tags was developed to identify and quantify carbonyl PTMs in plasma, revealing heavy modifications to human serum albumin by reactive carbonyl species.
Protein carbonylation, a marker of excessive oxidative stress, has been studied in the context of multiple human diseases related to oxidative stress. The variety of post-translational carbonyl modifications (carbonyl PTMs) and their low concentrations in plasma challenge their reproducible identification and quantitation. However, carbonyl-specific biotinylated derivatization tags (e.g., aldehyde reactive probe, ARP) allow for targeting carbonyl PTMs by enriching proteins and peptides carrying these modifications. In this study, an oxidized human serum albumin protein model (OxHSA) and plasma from a healthy donor were derivatized with ARP, digested with trypsin, and enriched using biotin-avidin affinity chromatography prior to nano reversed-phase chromatography coupled online to electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry with travelling wave ion mobility spectrometry (nRPC-ESI-MS/MS-TWIMS). The presented workflow addresses several analytical challenges by using ARP-specific fragment ions to reliably identify ARP peptides. Furthermore, the reproducible recovery and relative quantitation of ARP peptides were validated. Human serum albumin (HSA) in plasma was heavily modified by a variety of direct amino acid oxidation products and adducts from reactive carbonyl species (RCS), with most RCS modifications being detected in six hotspots, i.e., Lys10, Lys190, Lys199, Lys281, Lys432, and Lys525 of mature HSA.

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