4.8 Article

Comprehensive and Reliable Phosphorylation Site Mapping of Individual Phosphoproteins by Combination of Multiple Stage Mass Spectrometric Analysis with a Target-Decoy Database Search

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue 14, Pages 5794-5805

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac900702g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [20675081, 20735004, 20605022, 90713017, 30700138]
  2. China State Key Basic Research Program [2005CB522701, 2007CB914102]
  3. China High Technology Research Program [2006AA02A309, 2008ZX10002-017, 2008ZX1002-020]
  4. Knowledge Innovation program of CAS [KJCX2YW.H09, KSCX2-YW-R-079]

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Since the emergence of proteomics, much attention has been paid to the development of new technologies for phosphoproteomcis analysis. Compared with large scale phosphorylation analysis at the proteome level, comprehensive and reliable phosphorylation site mapping of individual phosphoprotein is equally important. Here, we present a modified target-decoy database search strategy for confident phosphorylation site analysis of individual phosphoproteins without manual interpretation of spectra. Instead of using all protein sequences in a proteome database of an organism for the construction of a target-decoy database for phosphoproteome analysis, the composite database constructed for phosphorylation site analysis of individual phosphoproteins only included the sequences of the individual target proteins and a decoy version of a small inhomogeneous protein database. It was found that the confidence of phosphopeptide identifications could be effectively controlled when the acquired MS2 and MS3 spectra were searched against the above composite database followed with data processing. Because of the small size of the composite database, the computation time for the database search is very short, which allows the adoption of low-specificity proteases for protein digestion to increase the coverage of phosphorylation site mapping. The sensitivity and comprehensive phosphorylation site mapping of this approach was demonstrated by using two standard phosphoprotein samples of alpha-casein and beta-casein, and this approach was further applied to analyze the phosphorylation of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), which resulted in the identification of 17 phosphorylation sites, including five novel sites on four PKA subunits.

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