4.7 Article

Selective Enrichment of Cysteine-Containing Phosphopeptides for Subphosphoproteome Analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages 5341-5347

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.5b00830

Keywords

subphosphoproteome analysis; cysteine-containing phosphopeptide; crosstalk

Funding

  1. China State Key Basic Research Program Grant [2013CB911204, 2012CB910101, 2012CB910604]
  2. Creative Research Group Project of NSFC [21321064]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21235006, 21275142, 81361128015, 21535008, 21525524]

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Among the natural amino acids, cysteine is unique since it can form a disulfide bond through oxidation and reduction of sulfhydryl and thus plays a pervasive role in modulation of proteins activities and structures. Crosstalk between phosphorylation and other post-translational modifications has become a recurrent theme in cell signaling regulation. However, the crosstalk between the phosphorylation and the formation and reductive cleavage of disulfide bond has not been investigated so far. To facilitate the study of this crosstalk, it is important to explore the subset of phosphoproteome where phosphorylations are occurred near to cysteine in the protein sequences. In this study, we developed a straightforward sequential enrichment method by combining the thiol affinity chromatography with the immobilized titanium ion affinity chromatography to selectively enrich cysteine-containing phosphopeptides. The high specificity and high sensitivity of this method were demonstrated by analyzing the samples of Jurkat cells. This divide and conquer strategy by specific analysis of a subphosphoproteome enables identification of more low abundant phosphosites than the conventional global phosphoproteome approach. Interestingly, amino acid residues surrounding the identified phosphosites were enriched with buried residues (L, V, A, C) while depleted with exposed residues (D, E, R, K). Also, the phosphosites identified by this approach showed a dramatic decrease in locating in disorder regions compared to that identified by conventional global phosphoproteome. Further analysis showed that more proline directed ldnases and fewer acidophilic ldnases were responsible for the phosphorylation sites of this subphosphoproteome.

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