| Literature DB >> 27560983 |
Annamaria Sandomenico1, Annalia Focà1, Luca Sanguigno2, Andrea Caporale3, Giuseppina Focà1, Angelica Pignalosa1, Giusy Corvino2, Angela Caragnano4, Antonio Paolo Beltrami4, Giulia Antoniali4, Gianluca Tell4, Antonio Leonardi5, Menotti Ruvo1.
Abstract
Post-translational modifications (PTMs) strongly influence the structure and function of proteins. Lysine side chain acetylation is one of the most widespread PTMs, and it plays a major role in several physiological and pathological mechanisms. Protein acetylation may be detected by mass spectrometry (MS), but the use of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is a useful and cheaper option. Here, we explored the feasibility of generating mAbs against single or multiple acetylations within the context of a specific sequence. As a model, we used the unstructured N-terminal domain of APE1, which is acetylated on Lys27, Lys31, Lys32 and Lys35. As immunogen, we used a peptide mixture containing all combinations of single or multi-acetylated variants encompassing the 24-39 protein region. Targeted screening of the resulting clones yielded mAbs that bind with high affinity to only the acetylated APE1 peptides and the acetylated protein. No binding was seen with the non-acetylated variant or unrelated acetylated peptides and proteins, suggesting a high specificity for the APE1 acetylated molecules. MAbs could not finely discriminate between the differently acetylated variants; however, they specifically bound the acetylated protein in mammalian cell extracts and in intact cells and tissue slices from both breast cancers and from a patient affected by idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. The data suggest that our approach is a rapid and cost-effective method to generate mAbs against specific proteins modified by multiple acetylations or other PTMs.Entities:
Keywords: APE1/Ref-1; Acetylation; acetylated-APE1; anti-acetyl-peptide monoclonal antibodies; peptide libraries
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27560983 PMCID: PMC5098450 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2016.1225643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857