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ESNOQ, Proteomic Quantification of Endogenous S-Nitrosation
Author(s) -
Xixi Zhou,
Pei Han,
Jiangmei Li,
Xu Zhang,
Bo Huang,
Hong-Qiang Ruan,
Chang Chen
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0010015
Subject(s) - nitrosation , stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture , endogeny , quantitative proteomics , biochemistry , proteome , chemistry , cysteine , proteomics , biology , enzyme , gene
S -nitrosation is a post-translational protein modification and is one of the most important mechanisms of NO signaling. Endogenous S -nitrosothiol (SNO) quantification is a challenge for detailed functional studies. Here we developed an ESNOQ (Endogenous SNO Quantification) method which combines the stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) technique with the detergent-free biotin-switch assay and LC-MS/MS. After confirming the accuracy of quantification in this method, we obtained an endogenous S -nitrosation proteome for LPS/IFN-γ induced RAW264.7 cells. 27 S -nitrosated protein targets were confirmed and using our method we were able to obtain quantitative information on the level of S -nitrosation on each modified Cys. With this quantitative information, over 15 more S -nitrosated targets were identified than in previous studies. Based on the quantification results, we found that the S -nitrosation levels of different cysteines varied within one protein, providing direct evidence for differences in the sensitivity of cysteine residues to reactive nitrosative stress and that S -nitrosation is a site-specific modification. Gene ontology clustering shows that S -nitrosation targets in the LPS/IFN-γ induced RAW264.7 cell model were functionally enriched in protein translation and glycolysis, suggesting that S- nitrosation may function by regulating multiple pathways. The ESNOQ method described here thus provides a solution for quantification of multiple endogenous S -nitrosation events, and makes it possible to elucidate the network of relationships between endogenous S -nitrosation targets involved in different cellular processes.

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