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Identification of Post Translational Modifications

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1 Identification of Post Translational Modifications
Beatrix Ueberheide March 25th 2019

2 Homework from last lecture

3 Assigned Paper

4

5 Ubiquitination - MS

6 Jackson Paper: USP4 ubiquitination
Catalytic dead USP4 (Cys311A) no longer interacts with CtIP and MRN Could it be that ubiquitination of USP4 is blocking the interaction with CtIP and MRN and that inactive USP4 can no longer de-ubiquitinates itself and hence prevents interaction? Co-expressed USP4 with HA tagged ubiquitin: GFP-USP4 WT; GFP-USP4 CD; GFP Performed affinity purification using the HA tag and Western Blot using the GFP handle Performed GFP affinity purification followed by LC-MS Found a sh%^$ load of ubiquitin

7 Table S4

8 Sites of ubiquitination on USP4
CD WT STLVCPECAK [M+1H]+1

9 Ubiquitinated spectrum

10 Which cysteine is ubiquitinylated?

11 Let’s check public databases:

12 From The GPM

13 From The GPM

14 Could it be this?

15 Easy Problem to have avoided

16 Figure Legend

17 Figure Legend

18 Figure Legend

19 Figure Legend

20 Characterizing PTMs

21 Detecting PTMs In theory quite simple, only the mass of the amino acid changes In practice difficult for several reasons Peptide is too short or too long to be detected Not enough sequence coverage to assign the site of modification Modification is present only in a small percentage Peptide is never selected for MS/MS Several amino acids in the peptide could be modified Modification might interfere with fragmentation Not enough sequence coverage to identify the peptide

22 Biological Mass Spectrometry
Proteolytic digestion Protein(s) Peptides Base Peak Chromatogram MS 500 1000 1500 m/z Time (min) Mass Spectrometer 200 600 1000 m/z MS/MS Database Search Manual Interpretation

23 Searching Proteomics Data
GSFLYEYSRRHPEYAVSVLLRLAKEYEATLEECCAKDDPHACYSTVFDKLKHLVDEPQNLIKQNCDQFEKGEYGFQNALIVRYTRKVPQVSTPTLVEVSRSLGKVGTRCCTKPESERMPCTEDYLSLILNRLCVLHEKTPVSEKVTKCCTESLVNRRPCFSALTP Protein Digestion LFTFHADICTLPDTEK RPCFSALTPDETYVPK MPCTEDYLSLILNR VPQVSTPTLVEVSR DDPHACYSTVFDK Peptide Mass Measurement 500 1000 1500 m/z MS Peptide Fragmentation 200 600 1000 m/z MS/MS

24 Proteomics is more than Mass Spec
Enrichment Fractionation Sample Protein Extraction Protein Digestion Data Analysis LC-MS Peptide Clean up Enrichment Fractionation

25 Inherent difficulty of proteome characterization
Proteolytic digestion Protein(s) Peptides Size of peptides depends entirely on the protein sequence (K, R, D, E, Y, F,….) Peptides too short or too long are not detectable If those peptides carry PTMs, they go undetected as well

26 Inherent difficulty of proteome characterization
Proteolytic digestion Protein(s) Peptides Protein A Protein B Protein C Protein D Protein E One protein group is reported!

27 Inherent difficulty of proteome characterization
Proteolytic digestion Protein(s) Peptides Protein A Cancer Protein A Healthy

28 The Central Dogma Proteomics Metabolomics seconds to minutes
hours (seconds) Genomics Transcriptomics Proteomics Metabolomics Adapted from Patti et al (2011) Nature Reviews| Molecular Cell Biology

29 Proteomics

30 Proteomics Protein Production/Changes Protein PTM modification/Changes
Protein-Protein Interaction/Changes Protein Structural Changes

31 Dynamic Range 200ng HeLa lysate: ~2500 proteins >8000 proteins
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 Time (min) Relative Abundance 444.74 477.31 408.73 492.79 652.36 472.77 425.72 599.76 416.25 590.81 566.77 567.78 420.79 533.32 644.73 757.40 895.95 446.91 655.85 584.80 680.37 533.27 726.05 911.40 455.32 899.46 200ng HeLa lysate: ~2500 proteins >8000 proteins 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 Time (min) Relative Abundance 575.31 395.24 476.23 671.82 682.70 480.79 492.75 467.26 518.21 547.32 663.58 829.38 489.96 371.10 518.03 637.98 749.80 669.59 756.43 992.46 623.58 593.83 840.41 738.06 871.38 200ng Human Plasma: ~250 proteins

32 Success Rate of a Proteomics Experiment
Distribution of Protein Amounts Number of Proteins Fractionation Enrichment Proteins Detected Log (Protein Amount) DEFINITION: The success rate of a proteomics experiment is defined as the number of proteins detected divided by the total number of proteins in the proteome. J. Eriksson, D. Fenyö, "Improving the success rate of proteome analysis by modeling protein-abundance distributions and experimental designs". Nature Biotechnology 25 (2007)

33 Fractionation and Enrichment
One sample becomes 10 or more Fractions Protein identification increases from ~2000 to ~8000 ( 2 hours versus 60 hours instrument time)

34 Fractionation and Enrichment increases the MS instrument time

35 Multiplexing for Quantitation
SILAC TANDEM MASS TAGS

36 SILAC

37 Multiplex Analysis (TMT)

38 iTRAQ

39 Multiplex Analysis (TMT)

40 TMT (iTRAQ)

41 MS2 of a peptide Peptide: AVDTWSWGER
Protein: Galectin 3 binding protein May stimulate host defense against viruses and tumor cells

42 Zoom in

43 Quantitative multiplexed proteomic analysis of TNKS DKO cells
7,254 proteins quantified: 608 showed significant change in abundance 287 increased in the DKO 74 of the 287 contained a TNKS-binding site 23 of the 74 tankyrase targets are shown in the heatmap Highlighted proteins were selected for validation Bhardwaj A., Yang, Y., Ueberheide, B., Smith, S., Whole proteome analysis of human tankyrase knockout cells reveals targets of tankyrase-mediated degradation, Nature Communications, 8:2214 (2017)

44 Characterizing PTMs

45 Modified Peptide is not abundant enough to be selected for MS/MS
enriching for the modification Phospho specific enrichment (IMAC, TiO2) Antibody based enrichment (ubiquitin, phosphotyrosine)

46 Fractionation and Enrichment
Total Cell Lysate 1824 Protein Groups 12389 Peptides 26 phosphorylated peptides 100 % S & T 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 Time (min) 5 10 15 Relative Abundance Total cell lysate 1 HILIC Fraction 917 Protein Groups 1208 Peptides 95 phosphorylated peptides 100 % S & T 0 % Y 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 Time (min) 5 10 15 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 Relative Abundance

47 Fractionation and Enrichment
20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 Time (min) 5 10 15 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 Relative Abundance Total cell lysate 1 HILIC Fraction 917 Protein Groups 1208 Peptides 95 phosphorylated peptides 100 % S & T 0 % Y Total Cell Lysate 1 HILIC Fraction TiO2 Enrichment 347 Protein Groups 419 Peptides 387 phosphorylated peptides 99.2 % S & T 0.8 % Y 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 46 48 50 52 54 56 58 60 62 64 Time (min) 5 10 15 25 35 45 55 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 Relative Abundance

48 Enrichment for pY Pre-Enrichment Post-Enrichment NL: 2.44E9
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 145 Time (min) Relative Abundance NL: 2.44E9 NL: 2.50E7 Pre-Enrichment Post-Enrichment

49 Enrichment for pY Pre-Enrichment Post-Enrichment
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110 115 120 125 130 135 140 145 Time (min) Relative Abundance NL: 2.44E9 NL: 2.50E7 Pre-Enrichment Total number of Proteins Total number of Peptides Total Phospho Peptides Tyrosine Phospho Peptides Pre-Enrichment 2364 18826 221 5 Post-Enrichment 988 2919 583 574 Post-Enrichment

50 Enrichment Strategies for the Detection of Phosphorylated Peptides
Unphosphorylated single phosphorylation multiple phosphorylation Hydrophilic Interaction Chromatography (HILIC) Phosphopeptides elute later than their unphosphorylated counterparts Stationary phase is hydrophilic Mobile phase is hydrophobic Peptide elute when it is more soluble in the solvent, the higher the charge the less soluble in the organic phase Works for PO4 but other modifications have other ways to enrich

51 Enrichment Strategies for the Detection of Phosphorylated Peptides
Time (min) neutral peptides basic peptides SCX Strong Cation Exchange Chromatography Stationary phase is negatively charged Mobile phase is a buffer that is increasing the pH (if peptide becomes neutral it elutes) Neutral peptides elute earlier: XXpSxxxxxR/K Positive peptides elute late: XXXXHXXXXR/K

52 Several Strategies are often combined

53 Multiplexed Mouse Study
10mg of protein for each of the 27 samples

54 Multiplexed Mouse Study
49 x 3 hr LC-MS analysis (>147 hours of instrument time)

55 Is the protein or the phosphorylation changed?

56 What if the enrichment worked, but you still don’t ‘see’ much?

57 MS/MS is not informative
m/z

58 MS/MS is not informative
Peptide with two possible modification sites

59 MS/MS is not informative
Peptide with two possible modification sites MS/MS spectrum m/z

60 MS/MS is not informative
Peptide with two possible modification sites Matching MS/MS spectrum m/z

61 MS/MS is not informative
Peptide with two possible modification sites Matching MS/MS spectrum m/z

62 MS/MS is not informative
Peptide with two possible modification sites Matching MS/MS spectrum m/z

63 Change the way the peptide get’s dissociated in the mass spectrometer
What if enough of the modified peptide is present, but still no ID is possible? Change the way the peptide get’s dissociated in the mass spectrometer

64 Tandem MS - Dissociation Techniques
CAD: Collision Activated Dissociation (b, y ions) increase of internal energy through collisions

65 Tandem MS - Dissociation Techniques
CAD: Collision Activated Dissociation (b, y ions) increase of internal energy through collisions ETD: Electron Transfer Dissociation (c, z ions) bombardment of peptides with electrons (radical driven fragmentation)

66 Tandem MS - Dissociation Techniques
CAD: Collision Activated Dissociation (b, y ions) selective fragmentation ETD: Electron Transfer Dissociation (c, z ions) more random fragmentation

67 Detecting PTMs In theory quite simple, only the mass of the amino acid changes In practice difficult for several reasons Peptide is too short or too long to be detected Not enough sequence coverage to assign the site of modification Modification is present only in a small percentage Peptide is never selected for MS/MS Several amino acids in the peptide could be modified Modification might interfere with fragmentation Not enough sequence coverage to identify the peptide

68 Searching for PTMs

69 CAD versus ETD x x Low charge
Modified from Joshua Coon, Analytical Chemistry, 81, (2009)

70 Doubly charged peptides

71 CAD versus ETD x Low charge Labile modifications
Modified from Joshua Coon, Analytical Chemistry, 81, (2009)

72 Phosphopeptides

73 O-Sulfonated Peptides

74 CAD versus ETD x x Low charge Labile modifications Intact proteins
Modified from Joshua Coon, Analytical Chemistry, 81, (2009)

75 Intact Histone Protein
CAD ETD

76 Intact Histone Protein
CAD M M P Ac Ac Ac P M P Ac M Ac M M M P P M M H3 1-ARTKQTARKSTGGKAPRKQLATKAARKSAPATGGVKKPHRYRPTVALRE-50 ETD

77 Large highly charged peptides
1:1000 m/z 11 12 13 14 Time (min) 415 m/z


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