| Literature DB >> 28652855 |
André Mateus1, Tomi A Määttä1, Mikhail M Savitski1.
Abstract
In recent years, phenotypic-based screens have become increasingly popular in drug discovery. A major challenge of this approach is that it does not provide information about the mechanism of action of the hits. This has led to the development of multiple strategies for target deconvolution. Thermal proteome profiling (TPP) allows for an unbiased search of drug targets and can be applied in living cells without requiring compound labeling. TPP is based on the principle that proteins become more resistant to heat-induced unfolding when complexed with a ligand, e.g., the hit compound from a phenotypic screen. The melting proteome is also sensitive to other intracellular events, such as levels of metabolites, post-translational modifications and protein-protein interactions. In this review, we describe the principles of this approach, review the method and its developments, and discuss its current and future applications. While proteomics has generally focused on measuring relative protein concentrations, TPP provides a novel approach to gather complementary information on protein stability not present in expression datasets. Therefore, this strategy has great potential not only for drug discovery, but also for answering fundamental biological questions.Entities:
Keywords: Drug discovery; Mass spectrometry-based proteomics; Protein thermal stability; Tandem mass tags; Target deconvolution; Thermal proteome profiling
Year: 2017 PMID: 28652855 PMCID: PMC5482948 DOI: 10.1186/s12953-017-0122-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Fig. 1Principle of thermal shift assays. Proteins can be thermally stabilized by the presence of a ligand, leading to a higher apparent melting temperature (Tm)
Fig. 2Thermal proteome profiling (TPP) method can be performed in one of three modes: temperature range (TPP-TR); compound concentration range (TPP-CCR); or two-dimensional TPP (2D-TPP). The general procedure is composed of (1) preparation of cells for the experiment, in which either cell extracts are prepared or intact cells are cultured; (2) drug treatment with either a single compound concentration (TPP-TR) or a range of compound concentrations (TPP-CCR and 2D-TPP); (3) heating the cells to a range of temperatures (TPP-TR and 2D-TPP) or a single temperature (TPP-CCR); (4) extraction of soluble protein fraction using ultracentrifugation after cell lysis—a mild detergent can be included to solubilize membrane proteins; (5) protein digestion using a proteolytic enzyme followed by peptide labeling with neutron-encoded isobaric tags (at this step, the illustration shows an example of the procedure for a TPP-TR experiment, but an analogous labeling scheme is used for TPP-CCR or 2D-TPP—see details in the main text); (6) mass spectrometric analysis using an Orbitrap mass spectrometer to resolve the 6 mDa differences between some of the adjacent TMT reporter ions (again, at this step, the illustration shows an example of the resulting spectra of one peptide following a TPP-TR experiment); and (7) data processing to obtain plots like the ones illustrated: for TPP-TR, melting curves for each protein in the absence of presence of drug will be generated—target engagement is observed as a shift in the apparent melting temperature (Tm) of the protein; for TPP-CCR, potency curves for each protein will be obtained—from these curves it is possible to estimate the potency of the drug against each of the targets; for 2D-TPP, heat maps colored by the intensity of the abundance of soluble protein at each concentration and temperature will be generated
Fig. 3Examples of applications of thermal proteome profiling (TPP). In drug discovery, TPP can identify targets and off-targets. The latter can explain adverse effects or allow drug repurposing. TPP can also be used to explore metabolic pathways by studying post-translational modifications, protein-protein interactions or basic protein function. Further, TPP can be combined with limited proteolysis or imaging to provide further insight into protein folding dynamics. By being positioned at the border of proteomics and metabolomics, TPP can be applied to study many other biological questions