Isobaric quantitative protein interaction reporter technology for comparative interactome studies

JD Chavez, A Keller, JP Mohr, JE Bruce - Analytical chemistry, 2020 - ACS Publications
JD Chavez, A Keller, JP Mohr, JE Bruce
Analytical chemistry, 2020ACS Publications
Chemical cross-linking with mass spectrometry (XL-MS) has emerged as a useful tool for the
large-scale study of protein structures and interactions from complex biological samples
including intact cells and tissues. Quantitative XL-MS (qXL-MS) provides unique information
on protein conformational and interaction changes resulting from perturbations such as drug
treatment and disease state. Previous qXL-MS studies relied on the incorporation of stable
isotopes into the cross-linker (primarily deuterium) or metabolic labeling with SILAC. Here …
Chemical cross-linking with mass spectrometry (XL-MS) has emerged as a useful tool for the large-scale study of protein structures and interactions from complex biological samples including intact cells and tissues. Quantitative XL-MS (qXL-MS) provides unique information on protein conformational and interaction changes resulting from perturbations such as drug treatment and disease state. Previous qXL-MS studies relied on the incorporation of stable isotopes into the cross-linker (primarily deuterium) or metabolic labeling with SILAC. Here, we introduce isobaric quantitative protein interaction reporter (iqPIR) technology which utilizes stable isotopes selectively incorporated into the cross-linker design, allowing for isobaric cross-linked peptide pairs originating from different samples to display distinct quantitative isotope signatures in tandem mass spectra. This enables improved quantitation of cross-linked peptide levels from proteome-wide samples because of the reduced complexity of tandem mass spectra relative to MS1 spectra. In addition, because of the isotope incorporation in the reporter and the residual components of the cross-linker that remain on released peptides, each fragmentation spectrum can offer multiple independent opportunities and, therefore, improved confidence for quantitative assessment of the cross-linker pair level. Finally, in addition to providing information on solvent accessibility of lysine sites, dead end iqPIR cross-linked products can provide protein abundance and/or lysine site modification level information all from a single in vivo cross-linking experiment.
ACS Publications