S-Alkylating Labeling Strategy for Site-Specific Identification of the S-Nitrosoproteome
Author(s) -
YiJu Chen,
WeiChi Ku,
PeiYi Lin,
Hsiao-Chiao Chou,
KayHooi Khoo,
YuJu Chen
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of proteome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.644
H-Index - 161
eISSN - 1535-3907
pISSN - 1535-3893
DOI - 10.1021/pr100680a
Subject(s) - s nitrosylation , cysteine , chemistry , nitrosylation , biochemistry , biotinylation , nitric oxide , peptide , transmembrane protein , cytoplasm , enzyme , receptor , organic chemistry
S-nitrosylation, a post-translational modification of cysteine residues induced by nitric oxide, mediates many physiological functions. Due to the labile nature of S-nitrosylation, detection by mass spectrometry (MS) is challenging. Here, we developed an S-alkylating labeling strategy using the irreversible biotinylation on S-nitrosocysteines for site-specific identification of the S-nitrosoproteome by LC-MS/MS. Using COS-7 cells without endogenous nitric oxide synthase, we demonstrated that the S-alkylating labeling strategy substantially improved the blocking efficiency of free cysteines, minimized the false-positive identification caused by disulfide interchange, and increased the digestion efficiency for improved peptide identification using MS analyses. Using this strategy, we identified total 586 unique S-nitrosylation sites corresponding to 384 proteins in S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP)/l-cysteine-treated mouse MS-1 endothelial cells, including 234 previously unreported S-nitrosylated proteins. When the topologies of 84 identified transmembrane proteins were further analyzed, their S-nitrosylation sites were found to mostly face the cytoplasmic side, implying that S-nitrosylation occurs in the cytoplasm. In addition to the previously known acid/basic motifs, the ten deduced consensus motifs suggested that combination of local hydrophobicity and acid/base motifs in the tertiary structure contribute to the specificity of S-nitrosylation. Moreover, the S-nitrosylated cysteines showed preference on beta-strand, having lower relative surface accessibility at the S-nitrosocysteines.
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