Protein Phosphorylation and Expression Profiling by Yin-Yang Multidimensional Liquid Chromatography (Yin-Yang MDLC) Mass Spectrometry

Jie Dai, Wen-Hai Jin, Quan-Hu Sheng, Chia-Hui Shieh, Jia-Rui Wu, and Rong Zeng*
Research Center for Proteome Analysis, Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China
J. Proteome Res., 2007, 6 (1), pp 250–262
DOI: 10.1021/pr0604155
Publication Date (Web): December 14, 2006
Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society
*

 To whom correspondence should be addressed at Research Center for Proteome Analysis, Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China. Tel.:  86-21-54920170. Fax:  86-21-54920171; E-mail:  zr@sibs.ac.cn.

Abstract

Abstract Image

A system which consisted of multidimensional liquid chromatography (Yin-yang MDLC) coupled with mass spectrometry was used for the identification of peptides and phosphopeptides. The multidimensional liquid chromatography combines the strong-cation exchange (SCX), strong-anion exchange (SAX), and reverse-phase methods for the separation. Protein digests were first loaded on an SCX column. The flow-through peptides from SCX were collected and further loaded on an SAX column. Both columns were eluted by offline pH steps, and the collected fractions were identified by reverse-phase liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Comprehensive peptide identification was achieved by the Yin-yang MDLC−MS/MS for a 1 mg mouse liver. In total, 14 105 unique peptides were identified with high confidence, including 13 256 unmodified peptides and 849 phosphopeptides with 809 phosphorylated sites. The SCX and SAX in the Yin-Yang system displayed complementary features of binding and separation for peptides. When coupled with reverse-phase liquid chromatography mass spectrometry, the SAX-based method can detect more extremely acidic (pI < 4.0) and phosphorylated peptides, while the SCX-based method detects more relatively basic peptides (pI > 4.0). In total, 134 groups of phosphorylated peptide isoforms were obtained, with common peptide sequences but different phosphorylated states. This unbiased profiling of protein expression and phosphorylation provides a powerful approach to probe protein dynamics, without using any prefractionation and chemical derivation.

Keywords: Protein phosphorylation • Protein expression • Strong-cation exchange • Strong-anion exchange • Yin-Yang multidimensional liquid chromatography • pH elution • Mass spectrometry

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History

  • Published In Issue January 05, 2007
  • Received August 16, 2006

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