Phosphatase and Kinase Substrate Specificity Profiling with Pooled Synthetic Peptides and Mass Spectrometry
- PMID: 34085215
- DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-1538-6_5
Phosphatase and Kinase Substrate Specificity Profiling with Pooled Synthetic Peptides and Mass Spectrometry
Abstract
Reversible phosphorylation is a pervasive regulatory event in cellular physiology controlled by reciprocal actions of protein kinases and phosphatases. Determining the inherent substrate specificity of kinases and phosphatases is essential for understanding their cellular roles. Synthetic peptides have long served as substrate proxies for defining intrinsic kinase and phosphatase specificities. Here, we describe a high throughput protocol to simultaneously measure specificity constants (kcat/KM) of many synthetic peptide substrates in a single pool using label-free quantitative mass spectrometry. The generation of specificity constants from a single pooled reaction provides a rigorous and rapid comparison of substrate variants to help define an enzyme's specificity. Equally applicable to kinases and phosphatases, as well as other enzyme classes, the protocol consists of three general steps: (1) reaction of enzyme with pooled peptide substrates, each ideally with a unique mass and at concentrations well below KM, (2) analysis of reaction products using liquid chromatography-coupled mass spectrometry (LC-MS), and (3) automated extraction and integration of elution peaks for each substrate/product pair. We incorporate an ionization correction strategy allowing direct calculation of reaction progress, and subsequently kcat/KM, from substrate and product peak areas in a single sample, obviating the need for stable isotope labeling. Peptide consumption is minimal, and high peptide purity and accurate concentrations are not required. Access to a high-resolution LC-MS system is the only nonstandard equipment need. We present an analysis pipeline consisting entirely of established open-source software tools, and demonstrate proof of principle with the highly selective cell cycle phosphatase Cdc14 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Keywords: High throughput enzyme assay; Kinases; LC-MS assay; Label-free mass spectrometry; Multiplex substrate reaction; Phosphatases; Quantitative mass spectrometry; Substrate specificity; Synthetic peptides.
Similar articles
-
Phosphoproteomic Approaches for Identifying Phosphatase and Kinase Substrates.Molecules. 2023 Apr 24;28(9):3675. doi: 10.3390/molecules28093675. Molecules. 2023. PMID: 37175085 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Combining SAMDI Mass Spectrometry and Peptide Arrays to Profile Phosphatase Activities.Methods Enzymol. 2018;607:389-403. doi: 10.1016/bs.mie.2018.04.021. Epub 2018 Jun 19. Methods Enzymol. 2018. PMID: 30149867 Free PMC article.
-
Multiplex Substrate Profiling by Mass Spectrometry for Kinases as a Method for Revealing Quantitative Substrate Motifs.Anal Chem. 2017 Apr 18;89(8):4550-4558. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b05002. Epub 2017 Apr 4. Anal Chem. 2017. PMID: 28322550 Free PMC article.
-
Multiplex isotope dimethyl labeling of substrate peptides for high throughput kinase activity assay via quantitative MALDI MS.Chem Commun (Camb). 2014 Nov 21;50(90):13960-2. doi: 10.1039/c4cc04906c. Chem Commun (Camb). 2014. PMID: 25267994
-
Mitochondrial protein phosphorylation in yeast revisited.Mitochondrion. 2021 Mar;57:148-162. doi: 10.1016/j.mito.2020.12.016. Epub 2021 Jan 4. Mitochondrion. 2021. PMID: 33412333 Review.
References
-
- Songyang Z, Lu KP, Kwon YT, Tsai LH, Filhol O, Cochet C, Brickey DA, Soderling TR, Bartleson C, Graves DJ, DeMaggio AJ, Hoekstra MF, Blenis J, Hunter T, Cantley LC (1996) A structural basis for substrate specificities of protein Ser/Thr kinases: primary sequence preference of casein kinases I and II, NIMA, phosphorylase kinase, calmodulin-dependent kinase II, CDK5, and Erk1. Mol Cell Biol 16(11):6486–6493 - DOI
-
- Brown NR, Noble MEM, Endicott JA, Johnson LN (1999) The structural basis for specificity of substrate and recruitment peptides for cyclin-dependent kinases. Nat Cell Biol 1(7):438–443 - DOI
-
- Jia Z, Barford D, Flint A, Tonks N (1995) Structural basis for phosphotyrosine peptide recognition by protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B. Science 268(5218):1754–1758 - DOI
-
- Peti W, Nairn AC, Page R (2013) Structural basis for protein phosphatase 1 regulation and specificity. FEBS J 280(2):596–611 - DOI
-
- Gray CH, Good VM, Tonks NK, Barford D (2003) The structure of the cell cycle protein Cdc14 reveals a proline-directed protein phosphatase. EMBO J 22(14):3524–3535 - DOI
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Molecular Biology Databases
Miscellaneous