| Literature DB >> 25143833 |
Ernesto S Nakayasu1, Si Wu2, Michael A Sydor3, Anil K Shukla3, Karl K Weitz3, Ronald J Moore3, Kim K Hixson2, Jong-Seo Kim4, Vladislav A Petyuk3, Matthew E Monroe3, Ljiljiana Pasa-Tolic2, Wei-Jun Qian3, Richard D Smith3, Joshua N Adkins3, Charles Ansong3.
Abstract
Lysine acetylation is a common protein posttranslational modification that regulates a variety of biological processes. A major bottleneck to fully understanding the functional aspects of lysine acetylation is the difficulty in measuring the proportion of lysine residues that are acetylated. Here we describe a mass spectrometry method using a combination of isotope labeling and detection of a diagnostic fragment ion to determine the stoichiometry of protein lysine acetylation. Using this technique, we determined the modification occupancy for ~750 acetylated peptides from mammalian cell lysates. Furthermore, the acetylation on N-terminal tail of histone H4 was cross-validated by treating cells with sodium butyrate, a potent deacetylase inhibitor, and comparing changes in stoichiometry levels measured by our method with immunoblotting measurements. Of note we observe that acetylation stoichiometry is high in nuclear proteins, but very low in mitochondrial and cytosolic proteins. In summary, our method opens new opportunities to study in detail the relationship of lysine acetylation levels of proteins with their biological functions.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25143833 PMCID: PMC4131070 DOI: 10.1155/2014/730725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Proteomics ISSN: 2090-2166
Figure 1Methodology for determination of lysine acetylation stoichiometry. Proteins are digested with endoproteinase Arg-C, acetylated with 1,1′-13C2-acetic anhydride, and analyzed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Upon MS/MS analysis, the fragmentation of acetyllysine generates diagnostic ions, at m/z 126.0913 (for endogenous acetylated lysine residues) and 127.0947 (for endogenously unmodified lysine residues) that can be used to identify and quantify acetylated peptides.
Acetylation stoichiometry measurements of bovine serum albumin standard.
| Measured peptides | Mixed stoichiometry | Measured stoichiometry | Standard deviation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 52 | 0 | 0.2 | 0.8 |
| 22 | 1 | 0.4 | 0.5 |
| 22 | 10 | 6.3 | 3.0 |
| 21 | 50 | 52.8 | 9.8 |
| 47 | 100 | 94.4 | 2.9 |
Figure 2Application of the method to determine lysine stoichiometries for analyzing nuclear proteins. Detection and quantification of lysine acetylation on nuclear proteins from RAW 264.7 cells treated with sodium butyrate (NaBut). (a) An example of identification and quantification of an acetylated peptide derived from histone H4. (b) Western blot against acetylated lysine 12 of histone H4 (H4K12Ac) and total histone H4 (load control). The relative densitometry of each H4K12Ac, normalized by the loading control (histone H4), is shown below each lane.
Presence of the diagnostic ion for lysine acetylation.
| Sample | Total PSM∗ | Lysine-containing PSM | Spectra containing diagnostic ion | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NaBut-repl.A | 6956 | 4418 | 3285 | 74.3% |
| NaBut-repl.B | 4635 | 3059 | 2459 | 80.0% |
| Control-repl.A | 6653 | 4033 | 3107 | 77.0% |
| Control-repl.B | 5533 | 3559 | 2819 | 79.2% |
|
| ||||
| Total | 23777 | 15069 | 11670 | 77.4% |
*PSM-peptide to spectrum match.
Figure 3Analysis of lysine acetylation stoichiometries of RAW 264.7 murine macrophage-like cell line. (a) Correlation between the stoichiometries measured in replicates A and B. (b) Distribution of lysine acetylation stoichiometry on proteins from whole RAW 264.7 cell lysates.
Figure 4Pathway analysis of lysine acetylation of RAW 264.7 murine macrophage-like cell line. Functions enriched with acetylated proteins. Function-enrichment analysis was performed with Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery (DAVID) and the network built with Cytoscape. Nodes (circles) represent proteins and are connected to their functions (yellow triangles). The node colors represent their acetylation stoichiometries.