| Literature DB >> 34177463 |
Trong Khoa Pham1,2, Weronika A Buczek2, Richard J Mead1, Pamela J Shaw1, Mark O Collins2.
Abstract
Oxidative stress appears to be a key feature of many neurodegenerative diseases either as a cause or consequence of disease. A range of molecules are subject to oxidation, but in particular, proteins are an important target and measure of oxidative stress. Proteins are subject to a range of oxidative modifications at reactive cysteine residues, and depending on the level of oxidative stress, these modifications may be reversible or irreversible. A range of experimental approaches has been developed to characterize cysteine oxidation of proteins. In particular, mass spectrometry-based proteomic methods have emerged as a powerful means to identify and quantify cysteine oxidation sites on a proteome scale; however, their application to study neurodegenerative diseases is limited to date. Here we provide a guide to these approaches and highlight the under-exploited utility of these methods to measure oxidative stress in neurodegenerative diseases for biomarker discovery, target engagement and to understand disease mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS); neurodegenerative disease; oxidation; oxidative stress; proteomics
Year: 2021 PMID: 34177463 PMCID: PMC8219902 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2021.678837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
FIGURE 1Different types of Oxy-Cys PTMs occurring in proteins.
FIGURE 2An overview of Oxi-Cys quantitative proteomics approaches for different types of Cys oxidations. Chemicals used for selective Oxi-Cys proteomics analysis. Free reduced Cys residues are firstly labeled with alkylating reagents (IAM, NEM, MMTS, etc.) while different PTMs of reversible Oxi-Cys residues are selectively alkylated by specific reducing regents; for example, DTT/TCEP for reducing all reversible Cys, arsenite for S-sulfenylation (S-OH), ascorbate for S-nitrosylation (S-NO), glutaredoxin for S-glutathionylation (S-SG). These newly formed reduced Cys residues then, theoretically, can be labeled by different alkylating reagents or specific probes coupled with tags for purification/enrichment. The quantitation is performed based on comparing intensities of tags from diseased compared to control groups. S-OH probes include: dimedone and bicyclononyne BCN; S-O2H probes include: C-nitroso esters, diazenes and S-nitrosothiols as detailed in Figures 5A,B.
Advantages and disadvantages of current Oxi-Cys proteomic approaches.
| SICyLIA | Simple protocol. Saves time and cost. Increased detection of low abundance oxidized Cys. High oxi-proteome coverage. Accurate quantitation. | Cannot distinguish different forms of reversible oxidized Cys. Need to control IAM reaction carefully to reduce the loss of deuterium in heavy IAM. Only two samples can be compared in a single experiment. | |
| IodoTMT | Multiple samples (up to 6 samples per experiment). | Low selectivity. Antibody based purification. | |
| cysTMTRAQ | Multiplexing analysis. Analyze both Oxi-Cys dynamics and protein-level changes in a single experiment. Can perform either Cys enrichment or not. Determine stoichiometry of redox modifications. High confidence and accuracy for oxi-Cys proteome analysis. | Costly and complicated protocol. Interference of both TMT and iTRAQ ion reporters cause ratio compression. | |
| isoTOP-ABPP | Measure/monitor directly functions of enzymes in native biological systems. Exact sites of Cys reactivity. Low (μM) of IA used to allow differentiate the extent of alkylation. The isoTOP-ABPP ratio is independent with both peptide and protein abundances. Proteome-wide profiles of Cys reactivity in complex biological systems. | Incomplete precipitation of proteins after click chemistry (∼50% of total proteins). Low accurate characterization of too large or too short peptides. Combination of digested enzymes need to be used to increase proteome coverage. Limit in software that can be used for data analysis. Long protocol. | |
| QTRP | High yield of biotinylated as click chemistry reaction performed on a peptide level. | Control concentration of IPM for alkylation. | |
| DiaAlk | Measure directly | Applicable for 2 biological samples only. Complicated sample preparation. Prolonged and costly protocol. Availability of chemicals. Many chemical reactions Not optimized to measure global level of | |
| OxiMRM | Benefit for low abundance oxidized proteins. Detect/measure both reversibly and irreversibly oxidized Cys. | Two different alkylating steps. Many precipitation steps. Need specific antibodies. Low number of peptides detected. | |
| UPLC-pSRM | Label free approach. No affinity purification required. Detect/measure irreversibly oxidized Cys. | Underestimation of low abundance oxidized protein detection. Requires specific antibody for immunoaffinity purification. Prior knowledge of targets required. | |
| Cys-DIA | High coverage of Cys proteome. | Only used with certain MS instruments. Need to run DDA to create customized database. Samples run individually does not support multiplexing. Need to purify Cys. |
FIGURE 5Structure of probes used for selective Oxi-Cys (A: S-OH and B: S-O2H) and click chemistry-based (C) approaches.
FIGURE 3Non-click chemistry-based thiol-reactive workflows. Different alkylation methods: (A) two chemically distinct alkylation reagents and (B) SICyLIA; isobariac tags: (C) iodoTMT and (D) cysTMTTRAQ.
FIGURE 4Isotope labeled reagents and probes used for Oxi-Cys proteomics. Isotopic chemicals and their adding extra mass for PTM search: (A) L-IAM and H-IAM, (B) L-NEM, and H-NEM, (C) iodoTMT reagents and the cleavage site to release ion reporters by CID during MS/MS analysis.
List of (potential and confirmed) biomarkers in neurodegenerative diseases from Oxy-Cys proteomics studies.
| Multiple sclerosis | CSF | Modified proteomics approach (No reduction and alkylation applied) and a targeted database search | Extracellular Superoxide dismutase (ECSOD) α1-antitrypsin (A1AT) Phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) Alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein Ectonucleotide pyrophosphate (ENPP-2) Gelsolin Interleukin-18 (IL-18) Ig heavy chain V III region POM | 195 232 318 340 773 304 38 22 | ||
| 7 MS patients (2 males + 5 females), ages 35.6 ± 10.5 | ||||||
| 5 idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) patients used as control group (1 male + 4 females), age 26.2 ± 7.6 | ||||||
| AD | CSF | Online immunoaffinity chromatography -mass spectrometry of intact protein | Transthyretin (TTR) isoforms (TTR-Cys10-Cys (cysteinylated), TTR-Cys10-CysGly (cysteine-glycinylated), and TTR-Cys10-SG (glutathionylated)/) | 10 | ||
| AD 37 patients | ||||||
| Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) 17 | ||||||
| Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) | ||||||
| Healthy control (HC) 7 | ||||||
| AD and PD | Human brain tissues | 2D gel, immunostaining and MS | Targets: sulfonic acid UCH-L1 | 220 | ||
| AD | Inferior parietal lobule from patients | 2D-Oxyblots and MS | Deoxyhemoglobin, α-crystallin B, α-enolase Glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) | |||
| AD | Hippocampus, substantia nigra and cortex, AD patients ( | 2D-Oxyblot and MS | Voltage-dependent anion-selective channel protein 2 (VDAC2). Superoxide dismutase [Mn] (SOD2). Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase C (ALDOC). | |||
| AD | Human Hippocampus | 2D-Oxyblots and MS | Pin1 | 113 | ||
| Human Prion Diseases | Human cortex and cerebellum | BST, avidin enrichment, iTRAQ, gel-free | 1509 | |||
| AD | Human cortical brain Tissues | Immunoblots, IodoTMT | Myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) Glutathione | 53, 127 3 65 |
FIGURE 6Click chemistry thiol-reactive workflows. (A) isoTOP-ABPP; (B) QTRP; (C) DiAlk. The Oxy-Cys quantitation of these approaches is based on MS1 level.
FIGURE 7Tags used in the isoTOP-ABPP workflow. Structure of light and heavy isotopic TEV-biotin tags used in isoTOP-ABP, their reaction with reduced Cys, purification using streptavidin and release of labeled proteins using TEV protease.
FIGURE 8Tags used in DiaAlk workflows. Structure of UV-biotin tags used in DiaAlk and their reaction with oxidized Cys (S-02H), purification using streptavidin, and release of labeled proteins by UV light.
FIGURE 9Considerations for choosing strategies for proteomic analysis of cysteine oxidation. Various features of each approach are included to help guide the choice of methods. The shape (□,○) and color code each represent a distinct method but are grouped according to the different overall approaches.