The phosphorylation of any site on a given protein can affect its activity, degradation rate, ability to dock with other proteins or bind divalent cations, and/or its localization. These effects can ...operate within the same protein; in fact, multisite phosphorylation is a key mechanism for achieving signal integration in cells. Hence, knowing the overall phosphorylation signature of a protein is essential for understanding the “state” of a cell. However, current technologies to monitor the phosphorylation status of proteins are inefficient at determining the relative stoichiometries of phosphorylation at multiple sites. Here we report a new capability for comprehensive liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS) analysis of intact phosphoproteins. The technology platform builds upon an integration of bottom-up and top-down approaches that is facilitated by intact protein reversed-phase (RP)LC concurrently coupled with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) MS and fraction collection. As the use of conventional RPLC systems for phosphopeptide identification has proven challenging due to the formation of metal ion complexes at various metal surfaces during LC/MS and ESI-MS analysis, we have developed a “metal-free” RPLC−ESI-MS platform for phosphoprotein characterization. This platform demonstrated a significant sensitivity enhancement for phosphorylated casein proteins enriched from a standard protein mixture and revealed the presence of over 20 casein isoforms arising from genetic variants with varying numbers of phosphorylation sites. The integrated workflow was also applied to an enriched yeast phosphoproteome to evaluate the feasibility of this strategy for characterizing complex biological systems and revealed ∼16% of the detected yeast proteins to have multiple phosphorylation isoforms. The intact protein LC/MS platform for characterization of combinatorial post-translational modifications (PTMs), with special emphasis on multisite phosphorylation, holds great promise to significantly extend our understanding of the roles of multiple PTMs on signaling components that control the cellular responses to various stimuli.
Multiplexed molecular profiling of tissue microenvironments, or spatial omics, can provide critical insights into cellular functions and disease pathology. The coupling of laser microdissection with ...mass spectrometry-based proteomics has enabled deep and unbiased mapping of >1000 proteins. However, the throughput of laser microdissection is often limited due to tedious two-step procedures, sequential laser cutting, and sample collection. The two-step procedure also hinders the further improvement of spatial resolution to <10 μm as needed for subcellular proteomics. Herein, we developed a high-throughput and high-resolution spatial proteomics platform by seamlessly coupling deep ultraviolet (DUV) laser ablation (LA) with nanoPOTS (Nanodroplet Processing in One pot for Trace Samples)-based sample preparation. We demonstrated the DUV-LA system can quickly isolate and collect tissue samples at a throughput of ∼30 spots/min and a spatial resolution down to 2 μm from a 10 μm thick human pancreas tissue section. To improve sample recovery, we developed a proximity aerosol collection approach by placing DMSO droplets close to LA spots. We demonstrated the DUV-LA-nanoPOTS platform can detect an average of 1312, 1533, and 1966 proteins from ablation spots with diameters of 7, 13, and 19 μm, respectively. In a proof-of-concept study, we isolated and profiled two distinct subcellular regions of the pancreas tissue revealed by hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. Quantitative proteomics revealed proteins specifically enriched to subcellular compartments.
An online metal-free weak cation exchange-hydrophilic interaction LC/RPLC system has been developed for sensitive, high-throughput top-down MS. Here, we report results for analyzing PTMs of core ...histones, with a focus on histone H4, using this system. With just ~24 μg on-column of core histones (H4, H2B, H2A, and H3) purified from human fibroblasts, 41 H4 isoforms were identified, with the type and location of PTMs unambiguously mapped for 20 of these variants. Compared to corresponding offline studies reported previously, the online weak cation exchange-hydrophilic interaction LC/RPLC platform offers significant improvement in sensitivity, with several orders of magnitude reduction in sample requirements and a reduction in the overall analysis time. To the best of our knowledge, this study represents the first online 2-D LC-MS/MS characterization of core histone mixture at the intact protein level.
Over the past decades, crop yields have risen in parallel with increasing use of fossil fuel-derived nitrogen (N) fertilizers but with concomitant negative impacts on climate and water resources. ...There is a need for more sustainable agricultural practices, and biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) could be part of the solution. A variety of nitrogen-fixing, epiphytic, and endophytic plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) are known to stimulate plant growth. However, compared with the rhizobium-legume symbiosis, little mechanistic information is available as to how PGPB affect plant metabolism. Therefore, we investigated the metabolic changes in roots of the model grass species
upon endophytic colonization by
SmR1 (fix
) or a fix
mutant strain (SmR54) compared with uninoculated roots. Endophytic colonization of the root is highly localized and, hence, analysis of whole-root segments dilutes the metabolic signature of those few cells impacted by the bacteria. Therefore, we utilized in-situ laser ablation electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to sample only those root segments at or adjacent to the sites of bacterial colonization. Metabolites involved in purine, zeatin, and riboflavin pathways were significantly more abundant in inoculated plants, while metabolites indicative of nitrogen, starch, and sucrose metabolism were reduced in roots inoculated with the fix
strain or uninoculated, presumably due to N limitation. Interestingly, compounds, involved in indole-alkaloid biosynthesis were more abundant in the roots colonized by the fix
strain, perhaps reflecting a plant defense response.
We have previously shown that different individuals exposed to the same antigen produce antibodies with identical mutations in their complementarity determining regions (CDR), suggesting that CDR ...tryptic peptides can serve as biomarkers for disease diagnosis and prognosis. Complete Fabs derived from disease specific antibodies have even higher potential; they could potentially be used for disease treatment and are required to identify the antigens toward which the antibodies are directed. However, complete Fab sequence characterization via LC‐MS analysis of tryptic peptides (i.e. bottom‐up) has proven to be impractical for mixtures of antibodies. To tackle this challenge, we have developed an integrated bottom‐up and top‐down MS approach, employing 2D chromatography coupled with Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS), and applied this approach for full characterization of the variable parts of two pharmaceutical monoclonal antibodies with sensitivity comparable to the bottom‐up standard. These efforts represent an essential step toward the identification of disease specific antibodies in patient samples with potentially significant clinical impact.
Mass spectrometric characterization of large biomolecules, such as intact proteins, requires the specificity afforded by ultrahigh resolution mass measurements performed at both the intact mass and ...product ion levels. Although the performance of time-of-flight mass analyzers is steadily increasing, the choice of mass analyzer for large biomolecules (e.g., proteins >50 kDa) is generally limited to the Fourier transform family of mass analyzers such as Orbitrap and ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR-MS), with the latter providing unmatched mass resolving power and measurement accuracy. Yet, protein analyses using FTMS are largely hindered by the low acquisition rates of spectra with ultrahigh resolving power. Frequency multiple detection schemes enable FTICR-MS to overcome this fundamental barrier and achieve resolving powers and acquisition speeds 4× greater than the limits imposed by magnetic field strength. Here we expand upon earlier work on the implementation of this technique for biomolecular characterization. We report the coupling of 21T FTICR-MS, 4X frequency multiplication, ion trapping field harmonization technology, and spectral data processing methods to achieve unprecedented acquisition rates and resolving power in mass spectrometry of large intact proteins. Isotopically resolved spectra of multiply charged ubiquitin ions were acquired using detection periods as short as 12 ms. Large proteins such as apo-transferrin (MW = 78 kDa) and monoclonal antibody (MW = 150 kDa) were isotopically resolved with detection periods of 384 and 768 ms, respectively. These results illustrate the future capability of accurate characterization of large proteins on time scales compatible with online separations.
Ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry (UHR-MS) coupled with direct infusion (DI) electrospray ionization offers a fast solution for accurate untargeted profiling. Fourier transform ion cyclotron ...resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometers have been shown to produce a wealth of insights into complex chemical systems because they enable unambiguous molecular formula assignment even if the vast majority of signals is of unknown identity. Interlaboratory comparisons are required to apply this type of instrumentation in quality control (for food industry or pharmaceuticals), large-scale environmental studies, or clinical diagnostics. Extended comparisons employing different FT-ICR MS instruments with qualitative direct infusion analysis are scarce since the majority of detected compounds cannot be quantified. The extent to which observations can be reproduced by different laboratories remains unknown. We set up a preliminary study which encompassed a set of 17 laboratories around the globe, diverse in instrumental characteristics and applications, to analyze the same sets of extracts from commercially available standard human blood plasma and Standard Reference Material (SRM) for blood plasma (SRM1950), which were delivered at different dilutions or spiked with different concentrations of pesticides. The aim of this study was to assess the extent to which the outputs of differently tuned FT-ICR mass spectrometers, with different technical specifications, are comparable for setting the frames of a future DI-FT-ICR MS ring trial. We concluded that a cluster of five laboratories, with diverse instrumental characteristics, showed comparable and representative performance across all experiments, setting a reference to be used in a future ring trial on blood plasma.
We present an updated analysis of the linker and core histone proteins and their proteoforms in the green microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii by top-down mass spectrometry (TDMS). The combination of ...high-resolution liquid chromatographic separation, robust fragmentation, high mass spectral resolution, the application of a custom search algorithm, and extensive manual analysis enabled the characterization of 86 proteoforms across all four core histones H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 and the linker histone H1. All canonical H2A paralogs, which vary in their C-termini, were identified, along with the previously unreported noncanonical variant H2A.Z that had high levels of acetylation and C-terminal truncations. Similarly, a majority of the canonical H2B paralogs were identified, along with a smaller noncanonical variant, H2B.v1, that was highly acetylated. Histone H4 exhibited a novel acetylation profile that differs significantly from that found in other organisms. A majority of H3 was monomethylated at K4 with low levels of co-occuring acetylation, while a small fraction of H3 was trimethylated at K4 with high levels of co-occuring acetylation.
Ultrasensitive nanoscale proteomics approaches for characterizing proteins from complex proteomic samples of <50 ng of total mass are described. Protein identifications from 0.5 pg of whole proteome ...extracts were enabled by ultrahigh sensitivity (<75 zmol for individual proteins) achieved using high-efficiency (peak capacities of ∼103) 15-μm-i.d. capillary liquid chromatography separations (i.e., using nanoLC, ∼20 nL/min mobile-phase flow rate at the optimal linear velocity of ∼0.2 cm/s) coupled on-line with a micro-solid-phase sample extraction and a nanoscale electrospray ionization interface to a 11.4-T Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer (MS). Proteome measurement coverage improved as sample size was increased from as little as 0.5 pg of sample. It was found that a 2.5-ng sample provided 14% coverage of all annotated open reading frames for the microorganism Deinococcus radiodurans, consistent with previous results for a specific culture condition. The estimated detection dynamic range for detected proteins was 105−106. An improved accurate mass and LC elution time two-dimensional data analysis methodology, used to both speed and increase the confidence of peptide/protein identifications, enabled identification of 872 proteins/run from a single 3-h nanoLC/FTICR MS analysis. The low-zeptomole-level sensitivity provides a basis for extending proteomics studies to smaller cell populations and potentially to a single mammalian cell. Application with ion trap MS/MS instrumentation allowed protein identification from 50 pg (total mass) of proteomic samples (i.e., ∼100 times larger than FTICR MS), corresponding to a sensitivity of ∼7 amol for individual proteins. Compared with single-stage FTICR measurements, ion trap MS/MS provided a much lower proteome measurement coverage and dynamic range for a given analysis time and sample quantity.
While the use of detergents is necessary for a variety of protein isolation preparation protocols, they are not compatible with mass spectral analysis due to ion suppression and adduct formation. ...This manuscript describes optimization of detergent removal, using commercially available SDS depletion spin columns containing an affinity resin, providing for both increased protein recovery and thorough SDS removal. Ion mobility spectrometry coupled with mass spectrometry (IMS‐MS) allowed for a concurrent analysis of both analyte and detergent. In the case of both proteins and peptides, higher detergent concentrations than previously reported provided an increase of sample recovery; however there was a limit as SDS was detected by IMS‐MS at higher levels of SDS indicating incomplete detergent depletion. The results also suggest that optimal conditions for SDS removal are dependent on the sample concentration. Overall, this study provides a useful guide for proteomic studies where SDS is required for efficient sample preparation.