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End-to-End Throughput Chemical Proteomics for Photoaffinity Labeling Target Engagement and Deconvolution.
Cheung, Sheldon T; Kim, Yongkang; Cho, Ji-Hoon; Brandvold, Kristoffer R; Ghosh, Brahma; Del Rosario, Amanda M; Bell-Temin, Harris.
Afiliación
  • Cheung ST; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 1400 McKean Road, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477, United States.
  • Kim Y; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 301 Binney Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, United States.
  • Cho JH; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 301 Binney Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, United States.
  • Brandvold KR; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 1400 McKean Road, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477, United States.
  • Ghosh B; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 1400 McKean Road, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477, United States.
  • Del Rosario AM; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 1400 McKean Road, Spring House, Pennsylvania 19477, United States.
  • Bell-Temin H; Janssen Research & Development, LLC, 301 Binney Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, United States.
J Proteome Res ; 2024 Oct 07.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39374182
ABSTRACT
Photoaffinity labeling (PAL) methodologies have proven to be instrumental for the unbiased deconvolution of protein-ligand binding events in physiologically relevant systems. However, like other chemical proteomic workflows, they are limited in many ways by time-intensive sample manipulations and data acquisition techniques. Here, we describe an approach to address this challenge through the innovation of a carboxylate bead-based protein cleanup procedure to remove excess small-molecule contaminants and couple it to plate-based, proteomic sample processing as a semiautomated solution. The analysis of samples via label-free, data-independent acquisition (DIA) techniques led to significant improvements on a workflow time per sample basis over current standard practices. Experiments utilizing three established PAL ligands with known targets, (+)-JQ-1, lenalidomide, and dasatinib, demonstrated the utility of having the flexibility to design experiments with a myriad of variables. Data revealed that this workflow can enable the confident identification and rank ordering of known and putative targets with outstanding protein signal-to-background enrichment sensitivity. This unified end-to-end throughput strategy for processing and analyzing these complex samples could greatly facilitate efficient drug discovery efforts and open up new opportunities in the chemical proteomics field.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Proteome Res Asunto de la revista: BIOQUIMICA Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Proteome Res Asunto de la revista: BIOQUIMICA Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Estados Unidos