Literature DB >> 28111955

Opposite Electron-Transfer Dissociation and Higher-Energy Collisional Dissociation Fragmentation Characteristics of Proteolytic K/R(X)n and (X)nK/R Peptides Provide Benefits for Peptide Sequencing in Proteomics and Phosphoproteomics.

Liana Tsiatsiani, Piero Giansanti, Richard A Scheltema, Henk van den Toorn, Christopher M Overall1, A F Maarten Altelaar, Albert J R Heck.   

Abstract

A key step in shotgun proteomics is the digestion of proteins into peptides amenable for mass spectrometry. Tryptic peptides can be readily sequenced and identified by collision-induced dissociation (CID) or higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD) because the fragmentation rules are well-understood. Here, we investigate LysargiNase, a perfect trypsin mirror protease, because it cleaves equally specific at arginine and lysine residues, albeit at the N-terminal end. LysargiNase peptides are therefore practically tryptic-like in length and sequence except that following ESI, the two protons are now both positioned at the N-terminus. Here, we compare side-by-side the chromatographic separation properties, gas-phase fragmentation characteristics, and (phospho)proteome sequence coverage of tryptic (i.e., (X)nK/R) and LysargiNase (i.e., K/R(X)n) peptides using primarily electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) and, for comparison, HCD. We find that tryptic and LysargiNase peptides fragment nearly as mirror images. For LysargiNase predominantly N-terminal peptide ions (c-ions (ETD) and b-ions (HCD)) are formed, whereas for trypsin, C-terminal fragment ions dominate (z-ions (ETD) and y-ions (HCD)) in a homologous mixture of complementary ions. Especially during ETD, LysargiNase peptides fragment into low-complexity but information-rich sequence ladders. Trypsin and LysargiNase chart distinct parts of the proteome, and therefore, the combined use of these enzymes will benefit a more in-depth and reliable analysis of (phospho)proteomes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  LysargiNase; electron-transfer dissociation; higher-energy collisional dissociation; peptide fragmentation; phosphoproteomics; proteomics; trypsin

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 28111955     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00825

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Proteome Res        ISSN: 1535-3893            Impact factor:   4.466


  7 in total

1.  Immunopeptidomic Analysis Reveals That Deamidated HLA-bound Peptides Arise Predominantly from Deglycosylated Precursors.

Authors:  Shutao Mei; Rochelle Ayala; Sri H Ramarathinam; Patricia T Illing; Pouya Faridi; Jiangning Song; Anthony W Purcell; Nathan P Croft
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 5.911

2.  Precision De Novo Peptide Sequencing Using Mirror Proteases of Ac-LysargiNase and Trypsin for Large-scale Proteomics.

Authors:  Hao Yang; Yan-Chang Li; Ming-Zhi Zhao; Fei-Lin Wu; Xi Wang; Wei-Di Xiao; Yi-Hao Wang; Jun-Ling Zhang; Fu-Qiang Wang; Feng Xu; Wen-Feng Zeng; Christopher M Overall; Si-Min He; Hao Chi; Ping Xu
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2019-01-08       Impact factor: 5.911

3.  Estimating the total number of phosphoproteins and phosphorylation sites in eukaryotic proteomes.

Authors:  Panayotis Vlastaridis; Pelagia Kyriakidou; Anargyros Chaliotis; Yves Van de Peer; Stephen G Oliver; Grigoris D Amoutzias
Journal:  Gigascience       Date:  2017-02-01       Impact factor: 6.524

4.  Tryp-N: A Thermostable Protease for the Production of N-terminal Argininyl and Lysinyl Peptides.

Authors:  John P Wilson; Jonathan J Ipsaro; Samantha N Del Giudice; Nikita Saha Turna; Carla M Gauss; Katharine H Dusenbury; Krisann Marquart; Keith D Rivera; Darryl J Pappin
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2020-03-20       Impact factor: 4.466

Review 5.  The Role of Electron Transfer Dissociation in Modern Proteomics.

Authors:  Nicholas M Riley; Joshua J Coon
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2017-12-12       Impact factor: 6.986

6.  [Mirror cutting-assisted orthogonal digestion enabling large-scale and accurate protein complex characterization].

Authors:  Ruonan Han; Lili Zhao; Yuxin An; Zhen Liang; Qun Zhao; Lihua Zhang; Yukui Zhang
Journal:  Se Pu       Date:  2022-03-08

7.  [Optimization and evaluation of protein C-terminal peptide enrichment strategy based on arginine cleavage].

Authors:  Xiaoxiao Zhao; Hao Hu; Wensi Zhao; Ping Liu; Minjia Tan
Journal:  Se Pu       Date:  2022-01
  7 in total

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