A Surface Biotinylation Strategy for Reproducible Plasma Membrane Protein Purification and Tracking of Genetic and Drug-Induced Alterations

Archive ouverte

Hörmann, Katrin | Stukalov, Alexey | Müller, André | Heinz, Leonhard | Superti-Furga, Giulio | Colinge, Jacques | Bennett, Keiryn

Edité par CCSD ; American Chemical Society -

International audience. Plasma membrane (PM) proteins contribute to the identity of a cell, mediate contact and communication, and account for more than two-thirds of known drug targets.1-8 In the past years, several protocols for the proteomic profiling of PM proteins have been described. Nevertheless, comparative analyses have mainly focused on different variations of one approach.9-11 We compared sulfo-NHS-SS-biotinylation, aminooxy-biotinylation, and surface coating with silica beads to isolate PM proteins for subsequent analysis by one-dimensional gel-free liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. Absolute and relative numbers of PM proteins and reproducibility parameters on a qualitative and quantitative level were assessed. Sulfo-NHS-SS-biotinylation outperformed aminooxy-biotinylation and surface coating using silica beads for most of the monitored criteria. We further simplified this procedure by a competitive biotin elution strategy achieving an average PM annotated protein fraction of 54% (347 proteins). Computational analysis using additional databases and prediction tools revealed that in total over 90% of the purified proteins were associated with the PM, mostly as interactors. The modified sulfo-NHS-SS-biotinylation protocol was validated by tracking changes in the plasma membrane proteome composition induced by genetic alteration and drug treatment. Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins were depleted in PM purifications from cells deficient in the GPI transamidase component PIGS, and treatment of cells with tunicamycin significantly reduced the abundance of N-glycoproteins in surface purifications.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Germline RBBP6 mutations in familial myeloproliferative neoplasms

Archive ouverte | Harutyunyan, Ashot | CCSD

International audience

Artemisinins Target GABA A Receptor Signaling and Impair α Cell Identity

Archive ouverte | Li, Jin | CCSD

International audience. Type 1 diabetes is characterized by the destruction of pancreatic β cells, and generating new insulin-producing cells from other cell types is a major aim of regenerative medicine. One promis...

Proteome-wide drug and metabolite interaction mapping by thermal-stability profiling

Archive ouverte | Huber, Kilian | CCSD

International audience. Thermal stabilization of proteins after ligand binding provides an efficient means to assess the binding of small molecules to proteins. We show here that in combination with quantitative mas...

Chargement des enrichissements...