Targeted super(18)O-Labeling for Improved Proteomic Analysis of Carbonylated Peptides by Mass Spectrometry

Proteomic characterization of carbonylated amino acid sites currently relies on confidently matching tandem mass spectra (MS super(2)) to peptides within a sequence database. Although effective to some degree, reliable proteomic characterization of carbonylated peptides using this approach remains a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2010-07, Vol.21 (7), p.1190-1203
Hauptverfasser: Roe, Mikel R, McGowan, Thomas F, Thompson, LaDora V, Griffin, Timothy J
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container_issue 7
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container_title Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
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creator Roe, Mikel R
McGowan, Thomas F
Thompson, LaDora V
Griffin, Timothy J
description Proteomic characterization of carbonylated amino acid sites currently relies on confidently matching tandem mass spectra (MS super(2)) to peptides within a sequence database. Although effective to some degree, reliable proteomic characterization of carbonylated peptides using this approach remains a challenge needing new, complementary solutions. To this end, we developed a method based on partial super(18)O-labeling of reactive carbonyl modifications, which produces a unique isotope signature in mass spectra of carbonylated peptides and enables their detection without reliance on matching MS super(2) spectra to a peptide sequence. Key to our method were optimized measures for eliminating trypsin-catalyzed incorporation of super(18)O at peptide C-termini, and for stabilizing the incorporated super(18)O within the carbonyl modification to prevent its loss during liquid chromatography separation. Applying our method to a rat skeletal muscle homogenate treated with the carbonyl modification 4-hyroxynonenal (4-HNE), we demonstrated its compatibility with solid-phase hydrazide enrichment of carbonylated peptides from complex mixtures. Additionally, we demonstrated the value of super(18)O isotope signatures for confirming HNE-modified peptide sequences matched via sequence database searching, and identifying modified peptides missed by MS super(2) and/or sequence database searching. Combining our super(18)O-labeling method with a customized automated software script, we systematically evaluated for the first time the efficiency of MS super(2) and sequence database searching for identifying HNE-modified peptides. We estimated that less than half of the modified peptides selected for MS super(2) were successfully identified. Collectively, our method and software should provide valuable new tools for investigators studying protein carbonylation via mass spectrometry-based proteomics.
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subjects Carbonyls
Computer programs
Mass spectra
Peptides
Proteomics
Searching
Signatures
title Targeted super(18)O-Labeling for Improved Proteomic Analysis of Carbonylated Peptides by Mass Spectrometry
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