Literature DB >> 19621364

"Reverse degradomics", monitoring of proteolytic trimming by multi-CE and confocal detection of fluorescent substrates and reaction products.

Helene Piccard1, Jialiang Hu, Pierre Fiten, Paul Proost, Erik Martens, Philippe E Van den Steen, Jo Van Damme, Ghislain Opdenakker.   

Abstract

A platform for profiling of multiple proteolytic activities acting on one specific substrate, based on the use of a 96-channel capillary DNA sequencer with CE-LIF of labeled substrate peptides and reaction products is introduced. The approach consists of synthesis of a substrate peptide of interest, fluorescent labeling of the substrate, either aminoterminally by chemical coupling, or carboxyterminally by transglutaminase reaction, proteolysis by a biological mixture of proteases in the absence or presence of protease inhibitors, multi-channel analysis of substrate and reaction products, and data collection and processing. Intact substrate and reaction products, even when varying by only one amino acid, can be relatively semi-quantified in a high-throughput manner, yielding information on proteases acting in complex biological mixtures and without prepurification. Monitoring, classification and inhibition of multiple proteolytic activities are demonstrated on a model substrate, the aminoterminus of the mouse granulocyte chemotactic protein-2. In view of extensive processing of chemokines into various natural forms with different specific biological activities, and of the fragmentary knowledge of processing proteases, examples of processing by neutrophil degranulate, tumor cell culture fluids and plasma are provided. An example of selection and comparison of inhibitory mAbs illustrates that the platform is suitable for inhibitor screening. Whereas classical degradomics technologies analyze the substrate repertoire of one specific protease, here the complementary concept, namely the study of all proteases acting, in a biological context, on one specific substrate, is developed and tuned to identify key proteases and protease inhibitors for the processing of any biological substrate of interest.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19621364     DOI: 10.1002/elps.200800698

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Electrophoresis        ISSN: 0173-0835            Impact factor:   3.535


  4 in total

Review 1.  Zymography methods for visualizing hydrolytic enzymes.

Authors:  Jennifer Vandooren; Nathalie Geurts; Erik Martens; Philippe E Van den Steen; Ghislain Opdenakker
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 28.547

Review 2.  Emerging principles in protease-based drug discovery.

Authors:  Marcin Drag; Guy S Salvesen
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 84.694

3.  Amine-reactive OVA multimers for auto-vaccination against cytokines and other mediators: perspectives illustrated for GCP-2 in L. major infection.

Authors:  Catherine Uyttenhove; Reece G Marillier; Fabienne Tacchini-Cottier; Mélanie Charmoy; Rachel R Caspi; Jesse M Damsker; Stanislas Goriely; Dan Su; Jo Van Damme; Sofie Struyf; Ghislain Opdenakker; Jacques Van Snick
Journal:  J Leukoc Biol       Date:  2011-03-08       Impact factor: 4.962

4.  Measurement of protein tyrosine phosphatase activity in single cells by capillary electrophoresis.

Authors:  Ryan M Phillips; Eric Bair; David S Lawrence; Christopher E Sims; Nancy L Allbritton
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2013-05-30       Impact factor: 6.986

  4 in total

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