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1.
Cell ; 184(2): 545-559.e22, 2021 01 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33357446

RESUMO

Biological processes are regulated by intermolecular interactions and chemical modifications that do not affect protein levels, thus escaping detection in classical proteomic screens. We demonstrate here that a global protein structural readout based on limited proteolysis-mass spectrometry (LiP-MS) detects many such functional alterations, simultaneously and in situ, in bacteria undergoing nutrient adaptation and in yeast responding to acute stress. The structural readout, visualized as structural barcodes, captured enzyme activity changes, phosphorylation, protein aggregation, and complex formation, with the resolution of individual regulated functional sites such as binding and active sites. Comparison with prior knowledge, including other 'omics data, showed that LiP-MS detects many known functional alterations within well-studied pathways. It suggested distinct metabolite-protein interactions and enabled identification of a fructose-1,6-bisphosphate-based regulatory mechanism of glucose uptake in E. coli. The structural readout dramatically increases classical proteomics coverage, generates mechanistic hypotheses, and paves the way for in situ structural systems biology.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Imageamento Tridimensional , Proteoma/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Regulação Alostérica , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Espectrometria de Massas , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Pressão Osmótica , Fosforilação , Proteólise , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/química , Estresse Fisiológico
2.
Mol Cell ; 75(4): 859-874.e4, 2019 08 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31351878

RESUMO

Homologous recombination (HR) is essential for high-fidelity DNA repair during mitotic proliferation and meiosis. Yet, context-specific modifications must tailor the recombination machinery to avoid (mitosis) or enforce (meiosis) the formation of reciprocal exchanges-crossovers-between recombining chromosomes. To obtain molecular insight into how crossover control is achieved, we affinity purified 7 DNA-processing enzymes that channel HR intermediates into crossovers or noncrossovers from vegetative cells or cells undergoing meiosis. Using mass spectrometry, we provide a global characterization of their composition and reveal mitosis- and meiosis-specific modules in the interaction networks. Functional analyses of meiosis-specific interactors of MutLγ-Exo1 identified Rtk1, Caf120, and Chd1 as regulators of crossing-over. Chd1, which transiently associates with Exo1 at the prophase-to-metaphase I transition, enables the formation of MutLγ-dependent crossovers through its conserved ability to bind and displace nucleosomes. Thus, rewiring of the HR network, coupled to chromatin remodeling, promotes context-specific control of the recombination outcome.


Assuntos
Troca Genética/fisiologia , Meiose/fisiologia , Mitose/fisiologia , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Espectrometria de Massas , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética
3.
Nat Protoc ; 18(3): 659-682, 2023 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36526727

RESUMO

Proteins regulate biological processes by changing their structure or abundance to accomplish a specific function. In response to a perturbation, protein structure may be altered by various molecular events, such as post-translational modifications, protein-protein interactions, aggregation, allostery or binding to other molecules. The ability to probe these structural changes in thousands of proteins simultaneously in cells or tissues can provide valuable information about the functional state of biological processes and pathways. Here, we present an updated protocol for LiP-MS, a proteomics technique combining limited proteolysis with mass spectrometry, to detect protein structural alterations in complex backgrounds and on a proteome-wide scale. In LiP-MS, proteins undergo a brief proteolysis in native conditions followed by complete digestion in denaturing conditions, to generate structurally informative proteolytic fragments that are analyzed by mass spectrometry. We describe advances in the throughput and robustness of the LiP-MS workflow and implementation of data-independent acquisition-based mass spectrometry, which together achieve high reproducibility and sensitivity, even on large sample sizes. We introduce MSstatsLiP, an R package dedicated to the analysis of LiP-MS data for the identification of structurally altered peptides and differentially abundant proteins. The experimental procedures take 3 d, mass spectrometric measurement time and data processing depend on sample number and statistical analysis typically requires ~1 d. These improvements expand the adaptability of LiP-MS and enable wide use in functional proteomics and translational applications.


Assuntos
Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Proteoma , Proteólise , Proteoma/análise , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 3810, 2021 06 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34155216

RESUMO

To a large extent functional diversity in cells is achieved by the expansion of molecular complexity beyond that of the coding genome. Various processes create multiple distinct but related proteins per coding gene - so-called proteoforms - that expand the functional capacity of a cell. Evaluating proteoforms from classical bottom-up proteomics datasets, where peptides instead of intact proteoforms are measured, has remained difficult. Here we present COPF, a tool for COrrelation-based functional ProteoForm assessment in bottom-up proteomics data. It leverages the concept of peptide correlation analysis to systematically assign peptides to co-varying proteoform groups. We show applications of COPF to protein complex co-fractionation data as well as to more typical protein abundance vs. sample data matrices, demonstrating the systematic detection of assembly- and tissue-specific proteoform groups, respectively, in either dataset. We envision that the presented approach lays the foundation for a systematic assessment of proteoforms and their functional implications directly from bottom-up proteomic datasets.


Assuntos
Isoformas de Proteínas/análise , Proteômica/métodos , Algoritmos , Animais , Benchmarking , Humanos , Camundongos , Peptídeos/análise , Peptídeos/metabolismo , Isoformas de Proteínas/metabolismo , Proteômica/normas , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem , Fluxo de Trabalho
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