Nearly every protein in the human body is modified with post-translational modifications (PTMs). PTMs affect proteins on many levels, including their function, interaction, half-life, and localization. Specifically, for histone proteins, PTMs such as lysine methylation and acetylation play essential roles in chromatin dynamic regulations. For this reason, methods to accurately detect and quantify PTMs are of paramount importance in cell biology, biochemistry, and disease biology. Most protein modifications are sub-stoichiometric, so, to be analyzed, they need methods of enrichment, which are mostly based on antibodies. Antibodies are produced using animals, resulting in high costs, ecological concerns, significant batch variations, and ethical implications. We propose using ferromagnetic nanoparticles functionalized with synthetic receptors, namely tetraphosphonate cavitands, as a tool for selective enrichment of methylated lysines present on histone tails. Before the enrichment step, histone proteins from calf thymus were digested to facilitate the recognition process and to obtain small peptides suitable for mass analyses. Cavitands were anchored on ferromagnetic nanoparticles to easily separate the PTM-peptides of interest from the rest of the proteolytic peptides. Our approach detects more modified peptides with higher signal intensity, rivaling commercial antibodies. This chemical strategy offers a cost-effective and efficient alternative for PTM detection, potentially advancing proteomic research.
Enrichment of histone tail methylated lysine residues via cavitand-decorated magnetic nanoparticles for ultra-sensitive proteomics / Orlandini, M.; Bonacini, A.; Favero, A.; Secchi, A.; Lazzarini, L.; Verucchi, R.; Dalcanale, E.; Pedrini, A.; Sidoli, S.; Pinalli, R.. - In: CHEMICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 2041-6520. - 15:32(2024), pp. 13102-13110. [10.1039/d4sc02076f]
Enrichment of histone tail methylated lysine residues via cavitand-decorated magnetic nanoparticles for ultra-sensitive proteomics
Orlandini M.Methodology
;Bonacini A.Methodology
;Favero A.Methodology
;Secchi A.Writing – Review & Editing
;Dalcanale E.Writing – Review & Editing
;Pedrini A.Writing – Review & Editing
;Pinalli R.
Supervision
2024-01-01
Abstract
Nearly every protein in the human body is modified with post-translational modifications (PTMs). PTMs affect proteins on many levels, including their function, interaction, half-life, and localization. Specifically, for histone proteins, PTMs such as lysine methylation and acetylation play essential roles in chromatin dynamic regulations. For this reason, methods to accurately detect and quantify PTMs are of paramount importance in cell biology, biochemistry, and disease biology. Most protein modifications are sub-stoichiometric, so, to be analyzed, they need methods of enrichment, which are mostly based on antibodies. Antibodies are produced using animals, resulting in high costs, ecological concerns, significant batch variations, and ethical implications. We propose using ferromagnetic nanoparticles functionalized with synthetic receptors, namely tetraphosphonate cavitands, as a tool for selective enrichment of methylated lysines present on histone tails. Before the enrichment step, histone proteins from calf thymus were digested to facilitate the recognition process and to obtain small peptides suitable for mass analyses. Cavitands were anchored on ferromagnetic nanoparticles to easily separate the PTM-peptides of interest from the rest of the proteolytic peptides. Our approach detects more modified peptides with higher signal intensity, rivaling commercial antibodies. This chemical strategy offers a cost-effective and efficient alternative for PTM detection, potentially advancing proteomic research.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.