| Literature DB >> 26663565 |
Stéphane Trevisiol1, Daniel Ayoub1, Antoine Lesur1, Lina Ancheva1, Sébastien Gallien1, Bruno Domon1.
Abstract
The wide diversity of proteins expressed in a cell or a tissue as a result of gene variants, RNA editing or PTMs results in several hundred thousand distinct functional proteins called proteoforms. The large-scale analysis of proteomes has been driven by bottom-up MS approaches. This allowed to identify and quantify large numbers of gene products and perform PTM profiling which yielded a significant number of biological discoveries. Trypsin is the gold standard enzyme for the production of peptides in bottom-up approaches. Several investigators argued recently that the near exclusive use of trypsin provided only a partial view of the proteome and hampered the discovery of new isoforms. The use of multiple proteases in a complementary fashion can increase sequence coverage providing more extensive PTM and sequence variant profiling. Here the various approaches to characterize proteoforms are discussed, including the use of alternative enzymes to trypsin in shotgun approaches to expand the observable sequence space by LC-MS/MS. The technical considerations associated with the use of alternative enzymes are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative proteases; Mass spectrometry; Proteoforms; Sequence coverage; Technology; Trypsin
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26663565 DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomics ISSN: 1615-9853 Impact factor: 3.984