Mass spectrometric characterization of limited proteolysis activity in human plasma samples under mild acidic conditions

[Display omitted] •Protease activity monitoring of patient serum samples by mass spectrometry.•Limited proteolysis in human plasma monitored by linear MALDI ToF MS profiling.•Human serum albumin is N-terminally cleaved upon dropping serum pH to 6.•CID fragmentation of a positively charged peptide at...

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Veröffentlicht in:Methods (San Diego, Calif.) Calif.), 2015-11, Vol.89, p.30-37
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Jingzhi, Röwer, Claudia, Koy, Cornelia, Ruß, Manuela, Rüger, Christopher P., Zimmermann, Ralf, von Fritschen, Uwe, Bredell, Marius, Finke, Juliane C., Glocker, Michael O.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Protease activity monitoring of patient serum samples by mass spectrometry.•Limited proteolysis in human plasma monitored by linear MALDI ToF MS profiling.•Human serum albumin is N-terminally cleaved upon dropping serum pH to 6.•CID fragmentation of a positively charged peptide at high pH after charge-stripping. We developed a limited proteolysis assay for estimating dynamics in plasma-borne protease activities using MALDI ToF MS analysis as readout. A highly specific limited proteolysis activity was elicited in human plasma by shifting the pH to 6. Mass spectrometry showed that two singly charged ion signals at m/z 2753.44 and m/z 2937.56 significantly increased in abundance under mild acidic conditions as a function of incubation time. For proving that a provoked proteolytic activity in mild acidic solution caused the appearance of the observed peptides, control measurements were performed (i) with pepstatin as protease inhibitor, (ii) with heat-denatured samples, (iii) at pH 1.7, and (iv) at pH 7.5. Mass spectrometric fragmentation analysis showed that the observed peptides encompass the amino acid sequences 1–24 and 1–26 from the N-terminus of human serum albumin. Investigations on peptidase specificities suggest that the two best candidates for the observed serum albumin cleavages are cathepsin D and E. Reproducibility, robustness, and sensitivity prove the potential of the developed limited proteolysis assay to become of clinical importance for estimating dynamics of plasma-borne proteases with respect to associated pathophysiological tissue conditions.
ISSN:1046-2023
1095-9130
DOI:10.1016/j.ymeth.2015.02.013