| Literature DB >> 27812413 |
Elena R Schroeter1, Caroline J DeHart2, Mary H Schweitzer1, Paul M Thomas2, Neil L Kelleher2.
Abstract
Proteomic studies of bonpan>e require specialized extraction protocols to demineralize and solubilize proteins from within the bone matrix. Although various protocols exist for bone protein recovery, little is known about how discrete steps in each protocol affect the subset of the bone proteome recovered by mass spectrometry (MS) analyses. Characterizing these different "extractomes" will provide critical data for development of novel and more efficient protein extraction methodologies for fossils. Here, we analyze 22 unique sub-extractions of chicken bone and directly compare individual extraction components for their total protein yield and diversity and coverage of bone proteins identified by MS. We extracted proteins using different combinations and ratios of demineralizing reagents, protein-solubilizing reagents, and post-extraction buffer removal methods, then evaluated tryptic digests from 20 µg aliquots of each fraction by tandem MS/MS on a 12T FT-ICR mass spectrometer. We compared total numbers of peptide spectral matches, peptides, and proteins identified from each fraction, the redundancy of protein identifications between discrete steps of extraction methods, and the sequence coverage obtained for select, abundant proteins. Although both alpha chains of collagen I (the most abundant protein in bone) were found in all fractions, other collagenous and non-collagenous proteins (e.g., apolipoprotein, osteonectin, hemoglobin) were differentially identified. We found that when a standardized amount of extracted proteins was analyzed, extraction steps that yielded the most protein (by weight) from bone were often not the ones that produced the greatest diversity of bone proteins, or the highest degree of protein coverage. Generally, the highest degrees of diversity and coverage were obtained from demineralization fractions, and the proteins found in the subsequent solubilization fractions were highly redundant with those in the previous fraction. Based on these data, we identify future directions and parameters to consider (e.g., proteins targeted, amount of sample required) when applying discrete parts of these protocols to fossils.Entities:
Keywords: Bone matrix proteins; Bone protein extraction protocols; Mass spectrometry; Methods comparison; Paleoproteomics; Proteomics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27812413 PMCID: PMC5088622 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Extraction protocols.
Demineralization and solubilization reagents, as well as applied volumes, incubation times and temperatures, and any wash stages, are provided in standardized format for easy comparison. At the bottom of each treatment description is the identifying code for the precipitated and dialyzed portions of each fraction produced that is used throughout the manuscript. This code combines the reagent volume, any pretreatment before reagent incubation, reagent, and buffer removal method into a shortened form (e.g., 20-H/ABC-D).
| Method | Demineralizing agent (mL solution/g of bone) | Solubilizing agent (mL solution/g of bone) | Special steps |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.6 M HCl | 4 M GuHCl in 0.05 M Tris | ||
| 0.6 M HCl | 2% SDS | Wash pellet with H2O after HCl | |
| 0.6 M HCl | 8 M Urea, 2 M Thiourea, | Wash pellet with H2O after HCl | |
| 0.6 M HCl | 0.05 M (NH4)HCO3 | Wash pellet with H2O after HCl | |
| 0.5 M EDTA | 6 M GuHCl in 0.1 M Tris | ||
| 0.5 M EDTA | 0.05 M (NH4)HCO3 | ||
| 0.1 NaOH | 10% Butyl Alcohol | NaOH and butyl alcohol were discarded. Multiple H2O washes of pellet. |
Figure 1Flow chart depicting a generalized extraction method.
Chicken bone was ground, placed in a centrifuge tube, and then incubated with a demineralizing reagent. After a period of incubation, the demineralizing reagent was removed and collected, and a solubilization reagent added. After another incubation period, the solubilizing reagent was removed and collected, and the pellet was discarded. Each supernatant was then split between two different buffer removal methods (e.g., precipitation, dialysis and lyophilization, drying by speed vacuum) and the subsequent extraction products were then kept separate for BCA, MS, and ELISA analyses.
Figure 2Graphs of the total number of (A) peptide spectral matches (PSMs), (B) unique peptides (PTM variations eliminated), and (C) proteins identified within each fraction evaluated by mass spectrometry.
(A) The greatest number of PSMs were recovered mainly from demineralization fractions, specifically 20-HCl fractions, 5-HCl-P, and 20-N/EDTA-D fractions, which all recovered 550–450 PSMs. The only solubilization fraction to recover PSMs within this range was 20-H/SDS-P. The next highest values were achieved by 20-H/ABC, whether dialyzed or dried by speed vacuum. This pattern was generally the same for total number of peptides (B), though 5-HCl-P had a greater diversity of unique peptides than higher volume (20-HCl) fractions, which had a greater number of PSMs. This relative pattern was again repeated in the numbers of unique proteins identified (C), which show that HCl, NaOH treated EDTA, and precipitated SDS recovered broader portions of the bone proteome than other extraction steps.
Breakdown of proteins identified in each fraction, and the number of peptides recovered for each (including variations in PTMs).
Demineralization and solubilization fractions are divided by the centerline. Proteins for which 5+ peptides were recovered in any fraction are bolded. Of these proteins, fractions that resulted in the most peptide identifications are marked in dark purple, and fractions with peptide identifications within one standard deviation of the highest value are marked in light purple. The highest diversity in identified proteins was observed predominantly in the demineralization fractions (left), which also resulted in the greatest numbers of peptides from most proteins. One notable exception was collagen I, alpha 2; various solubilization fractions (e.g., ABC, GuHCl) resulted in more peptide identifications for collagen I, alpha 2 than found in any demineralization fraction.
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Figure 3Venn diagrams depicting overlap (i.e., redundancy) of identified proteins between separate fractions.
(A) Method 1, (B) Method 2, (C) Method 3, (D) Method 4, (E) Method 5, (F) Method 6, (G) demineralization fractions of Method 7, and (H) a hypothetical method that combines three fractions to maximize recovery. In methods 1–5 (A–E), there was a large amount of overlap between the demineralization and solubilization fractions, and most of the unique proteins were found in the demineralization fractions,rendering the solubilization fractions largely redundant. In Method 6 (F), there were slightly more unique proteins in the two solubilization fractions (combined) than in the one demineralization fraction. In Method 7, there was substantial redundancy in the two sequential demineralization incubations, indicating that additional demineralization did not recover substantially new portions of the proteome. Combining three fractions (i.e., 20-HCl-P, 20-N/EDTA-D, and 20-H/SDS-P) into a hypothetical extraction (H) accounted for 51 of the 55 proteins identified across all fractions in this study, with the largest contribution of unique proteins coming from HCl.
Heat map of the degree of peptide coverage obtained in all fractions for top 28 (top half) proteins with the highest coverage in any fraction.
Demineralization and solubilization fractions are divided by the centerline. Of the 28 proteins listed, the greatest (or equal to greatest) degree of peptide coverage for 23 of them was detected in demineralization fractions. Notable exceptions to this trend include collagen I alpha 1 and alpha 2; best coverage for these abundant bone proteins was obtained in 20-H/SDS-P and 20-H/ABC-SV, respectively. A color legend for the heat map is provided at the bottom of the table.
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