Fishing for newly synthesized proteins with phosphonate-handles

Publication date

2020-06-26

Authors

Kleinpenning, FleurISNI 0000000504989300
Steigenberger, BarbaraISNI 0000000507443389
Wu, WeiISNI 0000000107490485
Heck, AlbertORCID 0000-0002-2405-4404ISNI 0000000393921118

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Abstract

Bioorthogonal chemistry introduces affinity-labels into biomolecules with minimal disruption to the original system and is widely applicable in a range of contexts. In proteomics, immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) enables enrichment of phosphopeptides with extreme sensitivity and selectivity. Here, we adapt and combine these superb assets in a new enrichment strategy using phosphonate-handles, which we term PhosID. In this approach, click-able phosphonate-handles are introduced into proteins via 1,3-dipolar Huisgen-cycloaddition to azido-homo-alanine (AHA) and IMAC is then used to enrich exclusively for phosphonate-labeled peptides. In interferon-gamma (IFNγ) stimulated cells, PhosID enabled the identification of a large number of IFN responsive newly synthesized proteins (NSPs) whereby we monitored the differential synthesis of these proteins over time. Collectively, these data validate the excellent performance of PhosID with efficient analysis and quantification of hundreds of NSPs by single LC-MS/MS runs. We envision PhosID as an attractive and alternative tool for studying stimuli-sensitive proteome subsets.

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Kleinpenning, F, Steigenberger, B, Wu, W & Heck, A J R 2020, 'Fishing for newly synthesized proteins with phosphonate-handles', Nature Communications, vol. 11, no. 1, 3244. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17010-0