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1.
A method of direct electroelution of intact proteins, without gel sectioning and orthogonal to the orientation of electrophoretic migration, was developed in application to Novex gels, using a simple home-made experimental setup. Six model proteins covering the molecular mass range of 14-120 kDa were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), stained with an aqueous solution of the fluorescent dye, SYPRO-red, and electroeluted from the intact gel. The sensitivity of visual detection was 0.1-0.2 microg upon illumination by a green laser and 0.5-1 microg of protein on side-ways UV-illumination. Duration (for each protein) and field strength were optimized to render protein electroelution from the gel near-quantitative (above 80%) and relatively fast (1-12 min at 1 kV). At a given field strength, the optimal duration was found to be inversely proportional to the mobility of proteins in SDS-PAGE. Sequential ultrafiltration was evaluated as a simple approach to concentrate electroeluted proteins and deplete SDS to a level compatible with mass spectrometry of proteins: protein yields in the electroeluate were 25-33% (depending on the protein used) after three steps of ultrafiltration with water. The analysis of the electroeluate by isoelectric focusing in an immobilized pH gradient, to reveal protein heterogeneity under a single SDS-PAGE band (prior, e.g., to mass spectrometric analysis), was demonstrated.  相似文献   

2.
Many proteomic projects based on a comparison of protein profiles displayed on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis rely on the identification of these proteins using peptide mass fingerprinting on a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometer after tryptic digestion. However, this approach is limited to an organism of which genomic information is largely available, i.e. when the total genome sequence is known. For other organisms, mass spectrometric sequence analysis is necessary for protein identification. We established a nano-LC-MS-MS system based on a quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer, which allows automated sequence analysis of tryptic digestion mixtures from single gel spots. This system is applied in a differential-display proteomic study to identify differentially expressed proteins in the neuroendocrine cells of the neurointermediate pituitary of black- and white-background adapted Xenopus laevis.  相似文献   

3.
The growing availability of genomic sequence information, together with improvements in analytical methodology, have enabled high throughput, high sensitivity protein identification. Silver staining remains the most sensitive method for visualization of proteins separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-D PAGE). Several silver staining protocols have been developed which offer improved compatibility with subsequent mass spectrometric analysis. We describe a modified silver staining method that is available as a commercial kit (Silver Stain PlusOne; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Amersham, UK). The 2-D patterns abtained with this modified protocol are comparable to those from other silver staining methods. Omitting the sensitizing reagent allows higher loading without saturation, which facilitates protein identification and quantitation. We show that tryptic digests of proteins visualized by the modified stain afford excellent mass spectra by both matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization and tandem electrospray ionization. We conclude that the modified silver staining protocol is highly compatible with subsequent mass spectrometric analysis.  相似文献   

4.
Proteins with molecular mass (M(r)) <20 kDa are often poorly separated in 2-D sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In addition, low-M(r) proteins may not be readily identified using peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) owing to the small number of peptides generated in tryptic digestion. In this work, we used a 2-D liquid separation method based on chromatofocusing and non-porous silica reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography to purify proteins for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometric (MALDI-TOFMS) analysis and protein identification. Several proteins were identified using the PMF method where the result was supported using an accurate M(r) value obtained from electrospray ionization TOFMS. However, many proteins were not identified owing to an insufficient number of peptides observed in the MALDI-TOF experiments. The small number of peptides detected in MALDI-TOFMS can result from internal fragmentation, the few arginines in its sequence and incomplete tryptic digestion. MALDI-QTOFMS/MS can be used to identify many of these proteins. The accurate experimental M(r) and pI confirm identification and aid in identifying post-translational modifications such as truncations and acetylations. In some cases, high-quality MS/MS data obtained from the MALDI-QTOF spectrometer overcome preferential cleavages and result in protein identification.  相似文献   

5.
Towards a two-dimensional proteome map of Mycoplasma pneumoniae   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A Proteome map of the bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae was constructed using two-dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis in combination with mass spectrometry (MS). M. pneumoniae is a human pathogen with a known genome sequence of 816 kbp coding for only 688 open reading frames, and is therefore an ideal model system to explore the scope and limits of the current technology. The soluble protein content of this bacterium grown under standard laboratory conditions was separated by 1-D or 2-D gel electrophoresis applying various pH gradients, different acrylamide concentrations and buffer systems. Proteins were identified using liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization ion trap and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-MS. Mass spectrometric protein identification was supported and controlled using N-terminal sequencing and immunological methods. So far, proteins from about 350 spots were characterized with MS by determining the molecular weights and partial sequences of their tryptic peptides. Comparing these experimental data with the DNA sequence-derived predictions it was possible to assign these 350 proteins to 224 genes. The importance of proteomics for genome analysis was shown by the identification of four proteins, not annotated in the original publication. Although the proteome map is still incomplete, it is already a useful reference for comparative analyses of M. pneumoniae cells grown under modified conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The identification of peroxisomal membrane proteins is very important to understand the import mechanisms of substrates and proteins into these organelles and the pathogenesis of human peroxisomal disorders like the Zellweger Syndrom. Peroxisomal membrane proteins were identified after separation by gel electrophoresis, tryptic digestion and mass spectrometric analysis. Using matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) and nanoliquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS), it was possible to identify 45 proteins of isolated yeast peroxisomal membranes.  相似文献   

7.
The previously reported fluorimetric detection of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-protein in the presence of cascade blue in agarose gel electrophoresis using barbital buffer was found to be equally feasible in the absence of the fluorescent marker and using Tris-Tricinate buffer, provided that SDS was loaded with the sample but not contained in the catholyte. That fluorescent detection is thought to be due to the formation of a moving boundary between leading SDS and trailing barbital, or Tricinate buffer. This hypothesis is supported by the following evidence: (i) The fluorometrically detected band disappears with addition of SDS to the catholyte; (ii) band area is proportional to protein and/or SDS load; (iii) mobility of SDS-proteins differing in mass is the same at agarose concentrations up to 3%; (iv) lowering of protein mobility by increase in gel concentration and/or increase in the size of the SDS-protein leads to band disappearance. Fluorescent detection of the band is like to be nonspecific and due to the light scattering properties of a stack comprising moving boundaries of any analytes with net mobilities intermediate between SDS (or micellar SDS) and the trailing buffer constituent at their regulated very high concentrations. The steady-state stack of SDS-proteins in the size range of 14.4-45.0 kDa, and the transient stack of an SDS-protein of 66.2 kDa have lent themselves to electroelution and characterization by mass of the proteins after removal of SDS and buffer exchange using matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF)-mass spectrometry. The possibility to form a stack of protein between leading SDS and trailing buffer anions under conditions of weak molecular sieving (open-pore gel and small-sized protein) contributes to the understanding of moving boundaries in gel electrophoresis, but in view of the narrowly defined conditions, under which this stack forms, is of limited practical significance for the gel electrophoresis of SDS-proteins.  相似文献   

8.
We describe CHASE, a novel algorithm for automated de novo sequencing based on the mass spectrometric (MS) fragmentation analysis of tryptic peptides. This algorithm is used for protein identification from sequence similarity criteria and consists of four steps: (1) derivatization of tryptic peptides at the N-terminus with a negatively charged reagent; (2) post-source decay (PSD) fragmentation analysis of peptides; (3) interpretation of the mass peaks with the CHASE algorithm and reconstruction of the amino acid sequence; (4) transfer of these data to software for protein identifications based on sequence homology (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, BLAST). This procedure deduced the correct amino acid sequence of tryptic peptide samples and also was able to deduce the correct sequence from difficult mass patterns and identify the amino acid sequence. This allows complete automation of the process starting from MS fragmentation of complex peptide mixtures at low concentration (e.g. from silver-stained gel bands) to identification of the protein. We also show that if PSD data are collected in a single spectrum (instead of the segmented mode offered by conventional matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) instrumentation), the complete workflow from MS-PSD data acquisition to similarity-based identification can be completely automated. This strategy may be applied to proteomic studies for protein identification based on automated de novo sequencing instead of MS or tandem MS patterns. We describe the Charge Assisted Sequencing Engine (CHASE) algorithm, the working protocol, the performance of the algorithm on spectra from MALDI-TOFMS and the data comparison between a TOF and a TOF-TOF instrument.  相似文献   

9.
Protein ions, after mass spectrometric separation, can be soft-landed into liquid surfaces with preservation of their native structures. Retention of biological activity is strongly favored in glycerol-based surfaces but not in self-assembled monolayer solid surfaces. Soft-landing efficiency for multiply-charged hexokinase ions was found to be some four times higher for a glycerol/fructose liquid surface than for a fluorinated self-assembled monolayer surface. Soft-landing into liquid surfaces is also shown to allow (1) protein purification, (2) on-surface identification of the soft-landed material using MALDI, and (3) protein identification by in-surface tryptic digestion. Pure lysozyme was successfully isolated from different mixtures including an oxidized, partially decomposed batch of the protein and a partial tryptic digest. Liquid glycerol/carbohydrate mixtures could be used directly to record MALDI spectra on the soft-landed compounds provided they were fortified in advance with traditional MALDI matrices such as p-nitroaniline and alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid. Various proteins were soft-landed and detected on-target using these types of liquid surface. Soft-landing of multiply-charged lysozyme ions onto fluorinated self-assembled monolayer surfaces was found to occur with a limited amount of neutralization, and trapped multiply-charged ions could be desorbed from the surface by laser desorption. Initial data is shown for a new approach to protein identification that combines top-down and bottom-up approaches by utilizing protein ion soft-landing from a protein mixture, followed by tryptic digestion of the landed material and detection of characteristic tryptic fragments by MALDI.  相似文献   

10.
Laser desorption-atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (LD-APCI-MS) is presented for the atmospheric pressure (AP) sampling of tryptic peptides directly from a polyacrylamide gel. In contrast to other gel sampling mass spectrometric approaches, this technique does not require the addition of any exogenous matrices to the gel to assist with ionization. In this arrangement, a CO(2) laser at 10.6 micro m is used to desorb intact neutral peptide molecules from the gel, followed by ionization in the gas-phase with APCI. The ions are then sampled via a heated capillary inlet and transferred to a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer for mass analysis. Preliminary results suggest the polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-LD-APCI-MS technique provides several advantages that could translate into a more convenient, robust methodology for the rapid identification and characterization of proteins. Finally, strategies regarding the further development of the method are presented.  相似文献   

11.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry has become an indispensable tool for identification of proteins by peptide mass-fingerprint analysis. Selection of the matrix, addition of matrix additives, and sample-preparation techniques are known to affect the quality of the spectra and hence protein identification. We investigated the effect of pyridine as matrix additive for the commonly used crystalline matrix α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CCA), forming a pyridinium based ionic liquid matrix, on the mass spectra of synthetic peptides and tryptic protein digests. Beside the equimolar mixture of CCA and pyridine, the effect of addition of substoichiometric amounts of the base to the acid was tested. Optimum results in terms of signal-to-noise ratios, reduction of chemical noise, and reduced formation of alkali adducts and matrix clusters were observed for the matrix CCA–pyridine in the molar ratio 2:1. The optimized ionic liquid matrix was used for identification of tryptic digests of six model proteins and for identification of a protein extracted from a two-dimensional gel with the proteome of the bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum, and shown to facilitate protein identification, yielding higher scores and increased sequence coverage compared with pure CCA. Thus CCA–Py 2:1 is a potential alternative for identification and characterization of proteins by peptide mass-fingerprint analysis. This paper was presented at the 38th Annual Meeting of the German Society for Mass Spectrometry (DGMS) held in March 2005 in Rostock, Germany.  相似文献   

12.
The objective of the work presented in this paper was to test the concept that tryptic peptides may be used as analytical surrogates of the protein from which they were derived. Proteins in complex mixtures were digested with trypsin and classes of peptide fragments selected by affinity chromatography, lectin columns were used in this case. Affinity selected peptide mixtures were directly transferred to a high-resolution reversed-phase chromatography column and further resolved into fractions that were collected and subjected to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. The presence of specific proteins was determined by identification of signature peptides in the mass spectra. Data are also presented that suggest proteins may be quantified as their signature peptides by using isotopically labeled internal standards. Isotope ratios of peptides were determined by MALDI mass spectrometry and used to determine the concentration of a peptide relative to that of the labeled internal standard. Peptides in tryptic digests were labeled by acetylation with acetyl N-hydroxysuccinimide while internal standard peptides were labeled with the trideuteroacetylated analogue. Advantages of this approach are that (i) it is easier to separate peptides than proteins, (ii) native structure of the protein does not have to be maintained during the analysis, (iii) structural variants do not interfere and (iv) putative proteins suggested from DNA databases can be recognized by using a signature peptide probe.  相似文献   

13.
The patterns of gene expression, post-translational modifications, protein/biomolecular interactions, and how these may be affected by changes in the environment, cannot be accurately predicted from DNA sequences. Approaches for proteome characterization are generally based upon mass spectrometric analysis of in-gel digested two dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2-D PAGE) separated proteins, allowing relatively rapid protein identification compared to conventional approaches. This technique, however, is constrained by the speed of the 2-D PAGE separations, the sensitivity limits intrinsic to staining necessary for protein visualization, the speed and sensitivity of subsequent mass spectrometric analyses for identification, and the limited ability for accurate quantitative measurements based on differences in spot intensity. We are presently developing alternative approaches for proteomics based upon the combination of fast capillary electrophoresis, or other suitable chromatographic separations, and the high mass accuracy and sensitivity obtainable with unique Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometers available at our laboratory. Several approaches are presently being pursued; one based upon the analysis of intact proteins and the second upon approaches for global protein digestion and accurate peptide mass analysis. Quantitation of protein/peptide levels are based on using two or more stable-isotope labeled versions of proteomes which are combined to obtain precise quantitation of relative protein abundances. We describe the status of our efforts towards the development of a high-throughput proteomics capability and present initial results for application to several microorganisms and discuss our efforts for extending the developed capability to mammalian proteomes.  相似文献   

14.
Proteins in a commercial milk powder have been separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and analysed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation mass spectrometry. The mass spectrometric analyses were conducted in two steps: analysis of the intact proteins following their passive extraction into a suitable solvent mixture and analysis in reflectron mode of in situ digests of a number of gel spots. The combination of the two methods allowed a reliable identification of a number of proteins, including nine caseins as well as certain protein modifications including single/multiple phosphorylation, lactose-protein conjugates and Coomassie Brilliant Blue adducts. Analyses of the intact proteins prior to their in situ digestion contributed to a more efficient and reliable consultation of protein databases.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, the advantages of carrying out the analysis of peptides and tryptic digests of proteins under gradient elution conditions at pH 6.5 by reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and in-line electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) are documented. For these RP separations, a double endcapped, bidentate anchored n-octadecyl wide pore silica adsorbent was employed in a capillary column format. Compared to the corresponding analysis of the same peptides and protein tryptic digests using low pH elution conditions for their RP-HPLC separation, this alternative approach provides improved selectivity and more efficient separation of these analytes, thus allowing a more sensitive identification of proteins at different abundance levels, i.e. more tryptic peptides from the same protein could be confidently identified, enabling higher sequence coverage of the protein to be obtained. This approach was further evaluated with very complex tryptic digests derived from a human plasma protein sample using an online two-dimensional (2D) strong cation-exchange (SCX)-RP-HPLC-ESI-MS/MS system. Again, at pH 6.5, with mobile phases of different compositions, improved chromatographic selectivities were obtained, concomitant with more sensitive on-line electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometric (ESI-MS/MS) analysis. As a consequence, more plasma proteins could be confidently identified, highlighting the potential of these RP-HPLC methods with elution at pH 6.5 to extend further the scope of proteomic investigations.  相似文献   

16.
Sun G  Anderson VE 《Electrophoresis》2004,25(7-8):959-965
Prevention of artifactual protein oxidation occurring during sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) acrylamide gel electrophoresis is critical for identifying physiological protein oxidation implicated in human diseases due to the routine use of gel electrophoresis to separate the multiple proteins in proteomic studies. To develop a methodology that completely prevents artifactual protein oxidation in SDS acrylamide gel electrophoresis, cytochrome c was electrophoresed on polyacrylamide gels and subjected to trypsin in-gel digestion followed by tryptic peptide analysis by mass spectrometry. It was found that degassing the acrylamide solution to remove molecular oxygen prior to gel polymerization is a crucial process to protect the electrophoresed protein from reactive oxygen species generated during electrophoresis. However, significant artifactual protein oxidation remains that can only be eliminated entirely, if proteins are electrophoresed on an SDS gel photopolymerized with flavin as the photoinitiator and thioglycolate included in the cathode buffer as a reactive oxygen species scavenger. Using this combination of methodologies, cytochrome c isolated from adult rat heart mitochondria was purified and digested followed by mass spectrometric analysis, demonstrating the requisite high resolution of the polyacrylamide gel and the entire elimination of artifactual oxidation.  相似文献   

17.
High-throughput DNA sequencing has resulted in increasing input in protein sequence databases. Today more than 20 genomes have been sequenced and many more will be completed in the near future, including the largest of them all, the human genome. Presently, sequence databases contain entries for more than 425.000 protein sequences. However, the cellular functions are determined by the set of proteins expressed in the cell – the proteome. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry and bioinformatics have become important tools in correlating the proteome with the genome. The current dominant strategies for identification of proteins from gels based on peptide mass spectrometric fingerprinting and partial sequencing by mass spectrometry are described. After identification of the proteins the next challenge in proteome analysis is characterization of their post-translational modifications. The general problems associated with characterization of these directly from gel separated proteins are described and the current state of art for the determination of phosphorylation, glycosylation and proteolytic processing is illustrated. Received: 16 December 1999 / Accepted: 17 December 1999  相似文献   

18.
We paper describe a mass spectrometric approach generally applicable for the rapid identification and characterization of proteins isolated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE). The highly sensitive nanoflow-electrospray mass spectrometry employing a quadrupole-time of flight mass spectrometer was used for the direct identification of proteins from the peptide mixture generated from only one high resolution 2-DE gel without high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) separation or Edman sequencing. Due to the high sensitivity and high mass accuracy of the instrument employed, this technique proved to be a powerful tool for the identification of proteins from femtomole amounts of materials. We applied the technique for the investigation of Burkitt lymphoma BL60 cell proteins. This cell line has been used as a model to assign apoptosis-associated proteins by subtractive analysis of normal and apoptotic cells. From the nuclear fraction of these cells, 36 protein spots were examined, from only one micropreparative Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 stained gel, after proteolytic digestion by matrix assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) and nanospray mass spectrometry (MS). In combination with database searches, of 33 proteins were successfully identified by nanospray-MS/MS-sequencing of up to eight peptides per protein. Three proteins were new proteins not listed in any of the available databases. Some of the identified proteins are known to be involved in apoptosis processes, the others were common proteins in the eukaryotic cell. The given technique and the protein data are the basis for construction of a database to compare normal and apoptosis-induced cells and, further, to enable fast screening of drug impact in apoptosis-associated processes.  相似文献   

19.
Mass spectrometry is a powerful technique for the identification of proteins at nanogram quantities. However, some degree of sample preparation prior to mass spectrometry is required, and silver-stained protein gel samples are most problematic. Here we report our strategy to obtain peptide mass profiles from silver-stained protein gel samples from one- or two-dimensional gels by destaining prior to enzymatic digestion. This study demonstrates that by using the destaining method, the sensitivity and quality of mass spectra is increased for matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometric analysis, permitting more proteins to be identified by peptide mass database analysis.  相似文献   

20.
Genome sequencing projects produce large amounts of information that could be translated into potential protein sequences. Such amounts of material continuously increase protein database sizes. At present, 22 times more protein sequences are available in the SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL databases than 8 years ago in SWISS-PROT. One of the methods of choice for protein identification makes use of specific endoproteolytic cleavage followed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometric (MALDI-MS) analysis of the digested product. Since 1993, when this technique was first demonstrated, the conditions required for a correct identification have changed dramatically. Whilst 4-5 peptides with an uncertainty of 2-3 Da were sufficient for a correct identification in 1993, 10-13 peptides with less than 60 ppm mass error are now required for human and E. coli proteins. This evolution is directly related to the continuous increase in protein database sizes, which causes an increase in the number of false positive matches in identification results. Use of an information complement deduced from the primary protein sequence, in the process of identification by peptide mass fingerprints, can help to increase confidence in the identification results. In this article, we propose the exchange of labile hydrogen atoms with deuterium atoms to provide an alternative information complement. The exchange reaction with optimised techniques has shown an average 95% of hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange on tryptic peptides. This level of exchange was sufficient to single out one or more peptides from a list of potential candidate proteins due to the dependence of H/D exchange on the peptide primary structure. This technique also has clear advantages in the identification of small proteins where direct protein identification is impaired by the limited number of endoproteolytic peptides. Then, information related to primary sequence obtained with this technique could help to identify proteins with high confidence without any expensive tandem mass spectrometry instruments.  相似文献   

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