June 17, 2013
Journal Article

Resin-assisted Enrichment of N-terminal Peptides for Characterizing Proteolytic Processing

Abstract

Proteolytic processing is a ubiquitous, irreversible posttranslational modification that plays an important role in cellular regulation in all living organisms. Herein we report a resin-assisted positive selection method for specifically enriching protein N-terminal peptides to facilitate the characterization of proteolytic processing events by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. In this approach, proteins are initially reduced and alkylated and their lysine residues are converted to homoarginines. Then, protein N-termini are selectively converted to reactive thiol groups. We demonstrate that these sequential reactions were achieved with nearly quantitative efficiencies. Thiol-containing N-terminal peptides are then captured (>98% efficiency) by a thiol-affinity resin, a significant improvement over the traditional avidin/biotin enrichment. Application to cell lysates of Aspergillus niger, a filamentous fungus of interest for biomass degradation, enabled the identification of 1672 unique protein N-termini and proteolytic cleavage sites from 690 unique proteins.

Revised: July 30, 2013 | Published: June 17, 2013

Citation

Kim J., Z. Dai, U.K. Aryal, R.J. Moore, D.G. Camp, S.E. Baker, and R.D. Smith, et al. 2013. Resin-assisted Enrichment of N-terminal Peptides for Characterizing Proteolytic Processing. Analytical Chemistry 85, no. 14:6826-6832. PNNL-SA-92785. doi:10.1021/ac401000q