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Porcine P2 myelin protein primary structure and bound fatty acids determined by mass spectrometry
Authors:Gianluca Maddalo  Mohammadreza Shariatgorji  Christopher M. Adams  Eva Fung  Ulrika Nilsson  Roman A. Zubarev  Jan Sedzik  Leopold L. Ilag
Affiliation:1. Department of Analytical Chemistry, Stockholm University, Svante Arrhenius v?g 16, 10691, Stockholm, Sweden
2. Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, 75124, Uppsala, Sweden
3. Division of Molecular Biometry, Institute for Medicinal Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, Scheeles v?g 2, 17177, Stockholm, Sweden
4. Department of Neurobiology, Health Care and Society, Protein Crystallization Facility, Karolinska Institute, NOVUM, 14186, Stockholm, Sweden
5. Department of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Protein Crystallization Facility, Royal Institute of Technology, KTH, Teknikringen 28, 10044, Stockholm, Sweden
6. Division of Neurobiology and Bioinformatic, National Institute of Physiological Science, Nishigonaka Myadaiji, Okazaki, 444-8585, Aichi, Japan
7. Department of Applied Chemistry, School of Engineering 7-3-1, The University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo, 113-8656, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Complementary collision-induced/electron capture dissociation Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry was used to fully sequence the protein P2 myelin basic protein. It is an antigenic fatty-acid-binding protein that can induce experimental autoimmune neuritis: an animal model of Guillain–Barré syndrome, a disorder similar in etiology to multiple sclerosis. Neither the primary structure of the porcine variant, nor the fatty acids bound by the protein have been well established to date. A 1.8-Å crystal structure shows but a bound ligand could not be unequivocally identified. A protocol for ligand extraction from protein crystals has been developed with subsequent gas chromatography MS analysis allowing determination that oleic, stearic, and palmitic fatty acids are associated with the protein. The results provide unique and general evidence of the utility of mass spectrometry for characterizing proteins from natural sources and generating biochemical information that may facilitate attempts to elucidate the causes for disorders such as demyelination.
Figure
FT-ICR MS/MS spectrum (left) of porcine myelin P2 protein (green) and GC profile (right) of associated lipids extracted/identified from protein crystals by GC-MS. (Note: Ribbon diagram was generated by Rasmol based on PDB file 1YIV. Crystals depicted are not of the sample used.)
Keywords:
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