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Proteomics and Mass Spectrometry

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Title: Proteomics and Mass Spectrometry


1
Proteomics and Mass Spectrometry
Molecular Cell Biology Lecture, Nov. 3, 2009
  • Ron Bose, MD PhD
  • Division of Oncology, Department of Medicine
  • Department of Cell Biology and Physiology

2
Introduction
Definition of Proteomics The large scale
identification and characterization of proteins
in a cell, tissue, or organism.
  • Well Established Methods for Proteomics
  • 2D-gels
  • Mass Spectrometry
  • Methods still under development
  • Protein Arrays
  • Antibody Arrays
  • Proteome-wide coverage with Antibodies

3
2 Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis
First Dimension pI by Isoelectric
Focusing Second Dimension MW by standard
SDS-PAGE
  • First Published in 1975 by Pat OFarrell
  • Can separate at least 1,000 proteins
  • Problems with run to run reproducibility limits
    the ability to easily compare multiple samples.
  • Solution to this problem DIGE (Difference
    Imaging Gel Electrophoresis)

Size
Charge (pI)
4
DIGE experiment
Slide courtesy of Tracy Andacht
5
DIGE experiment
Data from the labs of Tim Ley and Reid
Townsend Bredemeyer et al., PNAS 10111785, 2004
6
Limitations of DIGE
  • Protein solubility during Isoelectric Focusing.
  • Membrane proteins often lost.
  • Size Limits difficulty with proteins gt100 kD.
  • Identification of the proteins in each spot is
    tedious and slow.
  • Use of robotics
  • Individual spots typically contain several
    proteins.
  • Intensity change is therefore the sum of the
    changes of each individual protein.

7
Principles of Mass Spectrometry
  • The Importance of Mass
  • The mass of a molecule is a fundamental physical
    property of a molecule.
  • Mass can be used to identify the molecule.
  • Fragmentation provides Chemical Structure
  • If you fragment a molecule in a predictable
    manner and make measurements on the individual
    fragments, you can discern the structure of the
    molecule.

8
Biological Applications of Mass Spectrometry
  • Peptides and Proteins
  • Lipids
  • Oligosaccharides

9
Biological Applications of Mass Spectrometry
  • Peptides and Proteins
  • Lipids
  • Oligosaccharides

Methodology to identify lipids by mass
spectrometry. X. Han R.W. Gross, Expert
Review Proteomics 2253, 2005
10
Biological Applications of Mass Spectrometry
  • Peptides and Proteins
  • Lipids
  • Oligosaccharides Analysis of Milk

Tao et al., J. Dairy Sci 913768, 2008
11
Applications of Mass Spectrometry in the Physical
Sciences
  • Widely used in Analytical Chemistry and Organic
    Chemistry.
  • Examples
  • Analyzing of drugs during chemical synthesis
  • Identifying chemicals molecules or checking for
    contaminants.
  • Environmental
  • Measuring toxins such as PCB and Heavy Metals
  • Geology
  • Analyzing petroleum or petrochemicals

12
Applications of Mass Spectrometry in the Physical
Sciences
  • Space Exploration

Cassini-Huygens space probe sent to Saturn
carries a Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometry.
The Genesis Space Probe will carry a mass
spectrometry to measure solar isotope abundances.
Source www.nasa.gov
13
Applications of Mass Spectrometry in the Physical
Sciences
  • Anti Terrorism and Civil Defense

IonScan Mass Spectrometry Used at Airports and
other facilities for the detection of Explosives
and Narcotics. Manufacturer Smiths Detection
14
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Trypsin a protease that cleaves after basic
    residues (R or K).

Protein of Interest
Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
15
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Products from Trypsin digest.

Average length of tryptic peptides 10 aa
residues
Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
16
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Select an Individual Peptide in the Mass
    Spectrometer

Performed by adjusting the electrical fields in
the mass spectrometer.
Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
17
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Impart energy to the peptide by colliding it with
    an inert gas (Argon or Helium).

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
18
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Measure the masses of the fragment ions.

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
19
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • The mass difference between the peaks corresponds
    directly to the amino acid sequence.

B-ions contain the N-terminus
Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
20
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Y-ions contain the C-terminus

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
21
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • The entire spectrum contains B-ions,Y-ions, and
    other fragment ions.

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
22
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • The puzzle The B, Y, and other ions occur
    together and we cannot distinguish them just by
    simple inspection of the spectrum.

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
23
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • Actual spectra also have noise (either chemical
    noise or electrical noise).

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
24
Identifying a Protein by Mass Spectrometry on Its
Tryptic Peptides
  • The final spectrum the interpretation requires
    experience and aid by software algorithms.

Slide courtesy of Andrew Link
25
Software for Interpreting Peptide Mass Spectra
  • Statistical Matching
  • Work by statistically matching the measured
    spectra with the theoretical spectra of all
    possible tryptic peptides from an organism.
  • SeQuest
  • MASCOT
  • X! Tandem
  • OMSSA
  • Requires a fully sequenced genome.
  • De novo sequencing (determines a peptide sequence
    based on the spacings of the fragment ions).
  • PepNovo

26
Example of an Actual Spectrum
Y6
Y5
B3
pYLVIQGDDR
Y4
Peptide 326-334 with phosphorylation on Y326
Y7
B2
Q
Y2
I
V
Y8
Y3
L
Y1
G
D
D
pY Imm.
27
The Hardware for Peptide Mass Spectrometry
Liquid Chromatography
Vacuum Pump
Mass Analyzer
Detector
Ionization Source
Time of Flight (TOF) Quadropole Ion
Trap OrbiTrap Ion Cyclotron Resonance (ICR)
Different Types
Electrospray MALDI
Output Spectra
28
  • Movie of MALDI TOF mass spectrometer.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vOKxRx0ctrl0
  • Movie of FT-ICR mass spectrometer.
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?va5aLlm9q-Xcfeatu
    rerelated

29
Cell Biology Experiments with Mass Spectrometry
  • Analyzing Signal Transduction Pathways Her2/neu
    Receptor Tyrosine Kinase

Bose et al., PNAS 1039773, 2006
30
Cell Biology Experiments with Mass Spectrometry
  • Analyzing Protein Complexes The Nuclear Pore
    Complex

Michael P. Rout and Brian T. Chait Nature
450683, 2007 J. Cell Biology 148635, 2000
31
Cell Biology Experiments with Mass Spectrometry
  • Analyzing Post-Translational Modifications
    Ubiquitin

Steven P. Gygi Nature Biotech. 21921, 2003 Curr.
Opin. Chemical Biology 2005
32
Cell Biology Experiments with Mass Spectrometry
  • Analyzing Post-Translational Modifications
    Phosphorylation
  • Measured over 2,000 phosphorylation sites on 970
    proteins from HeLa cell nuclear extract.

Analysis of Phosphorylation Motifs
Beausoleil et al.,PNAS 10112130, 2004
33
Using Proteomics to Study Diseases
  • Lung Cancer Differences in Protein Tyr
    Phosphorylation

Patient Group 1
Patient Group 2 strong P-Tyr phos.
Rikova et al., Cell 1311190, 2007
34
Limitations and Cautions of Proteomics The Range
of Protein Concentrations In Yeast
Drilling Down to Low Abundance Proteins
Picotti et al., Cell Aug 21, 2009
35
Limitations and Cautions of Proteomics The Range
of Protein Concentrations In Human Plasma
3 - 4 log range of Mass Spectrometers
Albumin 40 g/l
C4 Complement 0.1 g/l
Myoglobin lt 100 mg/l
TNFa lt 1 ng/l
Anderson Anderson, MCP 1845, 2002
36
Limitations and Cautions of Proteomics The Range
of Protein Concentrations In Human Plasma
  • Depletion
  • Remove abundant proteins that are not of
    interest to your experiment. Methods Antibody
    based depletion, selective lysis technique,
    subcellular fractionation, etc.
  • Enrichment
  • Enrich for the proteins of interest.
  • Methods Lysis techniques or subcellular
    fractionation, affinity-based enrichment
    (antibodies, resins, etc).
  • Fractionation
  • Reduce the complexity of your sample by
    separating the proteins into different fractions
    and running these fractions separately.

37
How Large is the Proteome?
  • Depends on your definition !
  • Number of genes in the Human Genome about
    20,000
  • Do we include alternative splicing, protein
    processing, and post-translational modifications?
  • Estimates of the size of the proteome range
    from 20,000 to over 1,000,000.
  • Also, the proteome is DYNAMIC and proteins have
    specific LOCALIZATION.

38
Limitations and Cautions Sizes of Proteomic
Experiments
  • A Medium sized Proteomic Experiment
  • Several hundred proteins time required Months
  • A Large Proteomic Experiment
  • A few thousand proteins time required 1-3
    YEARS.
  • Proteomics cannot currently analyze as many genes
    as DNA microarray technology can !
  • Proteomics is also highly technically demanding
    and often requires a lot of optimization and
    small scale testing before performing a large
    experiment.

39
Mass Spectrometry at Washington University
  • Wash U receives NIH funding for the Biological
    and Biomedical Mass Spectrometry Research
    Resource.
  • At least 8 labs at Wash U. perform biological
    mass spectrometry experiments.
  • Available instruments on the Wash U medical
    campus, Wash U Danforth campus, and the Danforth
    Plant Science Center include
  • At least 30 mass spectrometers.
  • 4 LTQ-OrbiTrap mass spectrometers (some of the
    latest and highest performance instruments).
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