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A quantitative analysis of histone methylation and acetylation isoforms from their deuteroacetylated derivatives: application to a series of knockout mutants
Authors:Katherine L Fiedler  Jef D Boeke  Cynthia Wolberger  Robert J Cotter
Institution:1. Middle Atlantic Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, , Baltimore, MD, 21205 USA;2. Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and High Throughput Biology Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, , Baltimore, MD, 21205 USA;3. Department of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, , Baltimore, MD, 21205 USA;4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, , Baltimore, MD, 21205 USA
Abstract:The core histones, H2A, H2B, H3 and H4, undergo post‐translational modifications (PTMs) including lysine acetylation, methylation and ubiquitylation, arginine methylation and serine phosphorylation. Lysine residues may be mono‐, di‐ and trimethylated, the latter resulting in an addition of mass to the protein that differs from acetylation by only 0.03639 Da, but that can be distinguished either on high‐performance mass spectrometers with sufficient mass accuracy and mass resolution or via retention times. Here we describe the use of chemical derivatization to quantify methylated and acetylated histone isoforms by forming deuteroacetylated histone derivatives prior to tryptic digestion and bottom‐up liquid chromatography‐mass spectrometric analysis. The deuteroacetylation of unmodified or mono‐methylated lysine residues produces a chemically identical set of tryptic peptides when comparing the unmodified and modified versions of a protein, making it possible to directly quantify lysine acetylation. In this work, the deuteroacetylation technique is used to examine a single histone H3 peptide with methyl and acetyl modifications at different lysine residues and to quantify the relative abundance of each modification in different deacetylase and methylase knockout yeast strains. This application demonstrates the use of the deuteroacetylation technique to characterize modification ‘cross‐talk’ by correlating different PTMs on the same histone tail. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:histone  acetylation  methylation  deuteroacetylation  histone deacetylase  mass accuracy
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