| Literature DB >> 23369602 |
Elena López1, Sarbelio Rodríguez Muñoz, Juan López Pascual, Luis Madero.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: "It's not what we do, it's the way that we do it". Never has this maxim been truer in proteomics than now. Mass Spectrometry-based proteomics/phosphoproteomics tools are critical to understand the structure and dynamics (spatial and temporal) of signalling that engages and migrates through the entire proteome. Approaches such as affinity purification followed by Mass Spectrometry (MS) have been used to elucidate relevant biological questions disease vs. health. Thousands of proteins interact via physical and chemical association. Moreover, certain proteins can covalently modify other proteins post-translationally. These post-translational modifications (PTMs) ultimately give rise to the emergent functions of cells in sequence, space and time.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23369602 PMCID: PMC3552569 DOI: 10.1186/2001-1326-1-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Figure 1Identifying proteins via Proteomics-Mass Spectrometry. The mixture of proteins (or just one protein) must be digested to obtain peptides. The resulting peptides have to be cleaned and desalted via chromatography (e.g. POROS R2) to avoid salts and detergents, which artefact the MS analysis. Subsequently, the desalted and cleaned peptides are injected into the mass spectrometer. Finally, the matched peptides allow the identification of the proteins using databases (e.g. Mascot Server).
Figure 2Flow-through of Current Phospho-proteomic Analysis. Using phosphoenrichments (e.g. IMAC, TiO2; SIMAC) we are capable of isolating phosphorylated peptides and discard un-phosphopeptides. The isolated phosphopeptides have to be cleaned and desalted via chromatography (e.g. POROS R3, Disks C18 or graphite-, which isolate hydrophilic peptides) before the MS analysis. Finally, the desalted and cleaned phosphopeptides are injected into the mass spectrometer. Different types of ionization can be used (e.g. Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization MALDI or ElectroSpray Ionization ESI). Also, different kinds of fragmentations can be used (e.g. CID, ETD, ECD). In addition, different MS modes can be useful, for example: MS/MS, MSA, MS3NL. As a general rule, positive MS mode is currently more efficient than negative mode for phosphoproteomic studies. It is always necessary to test and combine different phosphoenrichments together with different MS strategies to recover and identify the maximum level of phosphopeptides. This will imply a high efficiency for your clinical research study. The resulting data (phosphorylated proteins identified) must be coupled to bioinformatic tools (software) in order to improve the biological understanding.