A Clean, More Efficient Method for In-Solution Digestion of Protein Mixtures without Detergent or Urea
Proteolytic digestion of a complicated protein mixture from an organelle or whole-cell lysate is usually carried out in a dilute solution of a denaturing buffer, such as 1−2 M urea. Urea must be subsequently removed by C18 beads before downstream analysis such as HPLC/MS/MS or complete methylation f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of proteome research 2006-12, Vol.5 (12), p.3446-3452 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Proteolytic digestion of a complicated protein mixture from an organelle or whole-cell lysate is usually carried out in a dilute solution of a denaturing buffer, such as 1−2 M urea. Urea must be subsequently removed by C18 beads before downstream analysis such as HPLC/MS/MS or complete methylation followed by IMAC isolation of phosphopeptides. Here we describe a procedure for digesting a complicated protein mixture in the absence of denaturants. Proteins in the mixture are precipitated with trichloroacetic acid/acetone for denaturation and salt removal and resuspended in NH4HCO3 buffer. After trypsinolysis, the resulting peptides are not contaminated by urea or other nonvolatile salts and can be dried in a SpeedVac to remove NH4HCO3. When this protocol was applied to an extract of A431 cells, 96.8% of the tryptic peptides were completely digested (i.e., had no missed cleavage sites), in contrast to 87.3% of those produced by digestion in urea buffer. We successfully applied this digestion method to analysis of the phosphoproteome of adiposomes from HeLa cells, identifying 33 phosphoryl-ation sites in 28 different proteins. Our digestion method avoids the need to remove urea before HPLC/MS/MS analysis or methylation and IMAC, increasing throughput while reducing sample loss and contamination from sample handling. We believe that this method should be valuable for proteomics studies. Keywords: in-solution digestion • proteomics • IMAC • phosphopeptides • adiposomes |
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ISSN: | 1535-3893 1535-3907 |
DOI: | 10.1021/pr0603396 |