Bioaffinity magnetic reactor for peptide digestion followed by analysis using bottom-up shotgun proteomics strategy
Language English Country Germany Media print
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- MeSH
- Bioreactors * MeSH
- Time Factors MeSH
- Chromatography, Affinity instrumentation methods MeSH
- Enzymes, Immobilized chemistry MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- Magnetics * MeSH
- Metalloendopeptidases chemistry MeSH
- Nanoparticles chemistry MeSH
- Neurotensin analysis MeSH
- Silicon Dioxide chemistry MeSH
- Peptides analysis chemistry MeSH
- Proteomics MeSH
- Reproducibility of Results MeSH
- Sensitivity and Specificity MeSH
- Serine Endopeptidases chemistry MeSH
- Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization methods MeSH
- Trypsin chemistry isolation & purification MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- anhydrotrypsin MeSH Browser
- Enzymes, Immobilized MeSH
- Ligands MeSH
- Metalloendopeptidases MeSH
- Neurotensin MeSH
- Silicon Dioxide MeSH
- Peptides MeSH
- peptidyl-Lys metalloendopeptidase MeSH Browser
- Serine Endopeptidases MeSH
- submandibular proteinase A MeSH Browser
- Trypsin MeSH
We report an efficient and streamlined way to improve the analysis and identification of peptides and proteins in complex mixtures of soluble proteins, cell lysates, etc. By using the shotgun proteomics methodology combined with bioaffinity purification we can remove or minimize the interference contamination of a complex tryptic digest and so avoid the time-consuming separation steps before the final MS analysis. We have proved that by means of enzymatic fragmentation (endoproteinases with Arg-C or/and Lys-C specificity) connected with the isolation of specific peptides we can obtain a simplified peptide mixture for easier identification of the entire protein. A new bioaffinity sorbent was developed for this purpose. Anhydrotrypsin (AHT), an inactive form of trypsin with an affinity for peptides with arginine (Arg) or lysine (Lys) at the C-terminus, was immobilized onto micro/nanoparticles with superparamagnetic properties (silica magnetite particles (SiMAG)-Carboxyl, Chemicell, Germany). This AHT carrier with a determined binding capacity (26.8 nmol/mg of carrier) was tested with a model peptide, human neurotensin, and the resulting MS spectra confirmed the validity of this approach.
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