Literature DB >> 25394399

Comprehensive and reproducible phosphopeptide enrichment using iron immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (Fe-IMAC) columns.

Benjamin Ruprecht1, Heiner Koch2, Guillaume Medard2, Max Mundt2, Bernhard Kuster3, Simone Lemeer3.   

Abstract

Advances in phosphopeptide enrichment methods enable the identification of thousands of phosphopeptides from complex samples. Current offline enrichment approaches using TiO(2), Ti, and Fe immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) material in batch or microtip format are widely used, but they suffer from irreproducibility and compromised selectivity. To address these shortcomings, we revisited the merits of performing phosphopeptide enrichment in an HPLC column format. We found that Fe-IMAC columns enabled the selective, comprehensive, and reproducible enrichment of phosphopeptides out of complex lysates. Column enrichment did not suffer from bead-to-sample ratio issues and scaled linearly from 100 μg to 5 mg of digest. Direct measurements on an Orbitrap Velos mass spectrometer identified >7500 unique phosphopeptides with 90% selectivity and good quantitative reproducibility (median cv of 15%). The number of unique phosphopeptides could be increased to more than 14,000 when the IMAC eluate was subjected to a subsequent hydrophilic strong anion exchange separation. Fe-IMAC columns outperformed Ti-IMAC and TiO(2) in batch or tip mode in terms of phosphopeptide identification and intensity. Permutation enrichments of flow-throughs showed that all materials largely bound the same phosphopeptide species, independent of physicochemical characteristics. However, binding capacity and elution efficiency did profoundly differ among the enrichment materials and formats. As a result, the often quoted orthogonality of the materials has to be called into question. Our results strongly suggest that insufficient capacity, inefficient elution, and the stochastic nature of data-dependent acquisition in mass spectrometry are the causes of the experimentally observed complementarity. The Fe-IMAC enrichment workflow using an HPLC format developed here enables rapid and comprehensive phosphoproteome analysis that can be applied to a wide range of biological systems.
© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25394399      PMCID: PMC4288255          DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M114.043109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics        ISSN: 1535-9476            Impact factor:   5.911


  49 in total

1.  Optimized IMAC-IMAC protocol for phosphopeptide recovery from complex biological samples.

Authors:  Juanying Ye; Xumin Zhang; Clifford Young; Xiaolu Zhao; Qin Hao; Lei Cheng; Ole Nørregaard Jensen
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2010-07-02       Impact factor: 4.466

2.  RockerBox: analysis and filtering of massive proteomics search results.

Authors:  Henk W P van den Toorn; Javier Muñoz; Shabaz Mohammed; Reinout Raijmakers; Albert J R Heck; Bas van Breukelen
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2011-02-07       Impact factor: 4.466

3.  Improved immobilized metal affinity chromatography for large-scale phosphoproteomics applications.

Authors:  Yasmine M Ndassa; Chris Orsi; Jarrod A Marto; She Chen; Mark M Ross
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 4.466

Review 4.  The phosphoproteomics data explosion.

Authors:  Simone Lemeer; Albert J R Heck
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2009-07-19       Impact factor: 8.822

5.  More than 100,000 detectable peptide species elute in single shotgun proteomics runs but the majority is inaccessible to data-dependent LC-MS/MS.

Authors:  Annette Michalski; Juergen Cox; Matthias Mann
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2011-02-28       Impact factor: 4.466

6.  Comparison of ERLIC-TiO2, HILIC-TiO2, and SCX-TiO2 for global phosphoproteomics approaches.

Authors:  Mostafa Zarei; Adrian Sprenger; Fabian Metzger; Christine Gretzmeier; Joern Dengjel
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2011-07-08       Impact factor: 4.466

7.  Metal ion-mobilizing additives for comprehensive detection of femtomole amounts of phosphopeptides by reversed phase LC-MS.

Authors:  Joerg Seidler; Nico Zinn; Erik Haaf; Martin E Boehm; Dominic Winter; Andreas Schlosser; Wolf D Lehmann
Journal:  Amino Acids       Date:  2010-06-16       Impact factor: 3.520

8.  Effect of peptide-to-TiO2 beads ratio on phosphopeptide enrichment selectivity.

Authors:  Qing-run Li; Zhi-bin Ning; Jia-shu Tang; Song Nie; Rong Zeng
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 4.466

9.  The SCX/IMAC enrichment approach for global phosphorylation analysis by mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Judit Villén; Steven P Gygi
Journal:  Nat Protoc       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 13.491

10.  Deep and highly sensitive proteome coverage by LC-MS/MS without prefractionation.

Authors:  Suman S Thakur; Tamar Geiger; Bhaswati Chatterjee; Peter Bandilla; Florian Fröhlich; Juergen Cox; Matthias Mann
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2011-05-17       Impact factor: 5.911

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  36 in total

1.  Bacterial Cellulose Shifts Transcriptome and Proteome of Cultured Endothelial Cells Towards Native Differentiation.

Authors:  Gerhard Feil; Ralf Horres; Julia Schulte; Andreas F Mack; Svenja Petzoldt; Caroline Arnold; Chen Meng; Lukas Jost; Jochen Boxleitner; Nicole Kiessling-Wolf; Ender Serbest; Dominic Helm; Bernhard Kuster; Isabel Hartmann; Thomas Korff; Hannes Hahne
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 5.911

Review 2.  Extracellular Protein Phosphorylation, the Neglected Side of the Modification.

Authors:  Eva Klement; Katalin F Medzihradszky
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 5.911

3.  ProteomeTools: Systematic Characterization of 21 Post-translational Protein Modifications by Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) Using Synthetic Peptides.

Authors:  Daniel Paul Zolg; Mathias Wilhelm; Tobias Schmidt; Guillaume Médard; Johannes Zerweck; Tobias Knaute; Holger Wenschuh; Ulf Reimer; Karsten Schnatbaum; Bernhard Kuster
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2018-05-29       Impact factor: 5.911

4.  Multisystem Analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Reveals Kinase-Dependent Remodeling of the Pathogen-Environment Interface.

Authors:  Xavier Carette; John Platig; David C Young; Michaela Helmel; Albert T Young; Zhe Wang; Lakshmi-Prasad Potluri; Cameron Stuver Moody; Jumei Zeng; Sladjana Prisic; Joseph N Paulson; Jan Muntel; Ashoka V R Madduri; Jorge Velarde; Jacob A Mayfield; Christopher Locher; Tiansheng Wang; John Quackenbush; Kyu Y Rhee; D Branch Moody; Hanno Steen; Robert N Husson
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2018-03-06       Impact factor: 7.867

5.  Boosting to Amplify Signal with Isobaric Labeling (BASIL) Strategy for Comprehensive Quantitative Phosphoproteomic Characterization of Small Populations of Cells.

Authors:  Lian Yi; Chia-Feng Tsai; Ercument Dirice; Adam C Swensen; Jing Chen; Tujin Shi; Marina A Gritsenko; Rosalie K Chu; Paul D Piehowski; Richard D Smith; Karin D Rodland; Mark A Atkinson; Clayton E Mathews; Rohit N Kulkarni; Tao Liu; Wei-Jun Qian
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2019-03-15       Impact factor: 6.986

6.  Localized Inhibition of Protein Phosphatase 1 by NUAK1 Promotes Spliceosome Activity and Reveals a MYC-Sensitive Feedback Control of Transcription.

Authors:  Giacomo Cossa; Isabelle Roeschert; Florian Prinz; Apoorva Baluapuri; Raphael Silveira Vidal; Christina Schülein-Völk; Yun-Chien Chang; Carsten Patrick Ade; Guido Mastrobuoni; Cyrille Girard; Lars Wortmann; Susanne Walz; Reinhard Lührmann; Stefan Kempa; Bernhard Kuster; Elmar Wolf; Dominik Mumberg; Martin Eilers
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2020-01-31       Impact factor: 17.970

7.  An Integrated Workflow for Global, Glyco-, and Phospho-proteomic Analysis of Tumor Tissues.

Authors:  Yangying Zhou; Tung-Shing Mamie Lih; Ganglong Yang; Shao-Yung Chen; Lijun Chen; Daniel W Chan; Hui Zhang; Qing Kay Li
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2020-01-03       Impact factor: 6.986

8.  Counterion Optimization Dramatically Improves Selectivity for Phosphopeptides and Glycopeptides in Electrostatic Repulsion-Hydrophilic Interaction Chromatography.

Authors:  Yusi Cui; Dylan Nicholas Tabang; Zishan Zhang; Min Ma; Andrew J Alpert; Lingjun Li
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2021-05-27       Impact factor: 6.986

9.  A capillary column packed with a zirconium(IV)-based organic framework for enrichment of endogenous phosphopeptides.

Authors:  Haizhu Lin; Hemei Chen; Xi Shao; Chunhui Deng
Journal:  Mikrochim Acta       Date:  2018-11-28       Impact factor: 5.833

10.  Widespread bacterial protein histidine phosphorylation revealed by mass spectrometry-based proteomics.

Authors:  Clement M Potel; Miao-Hsia Lin; Albert J R Heck; Simone Lemeer
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 28.547

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