posted on 2022-06-01, 16:03authored byShuchang Lai, Ying Chen, Fan Yang, Weidi Xiao, Yuan Liu, Chu Wang
Protein lipoylation is an evolutionarily
conserved post-translational
modification from prokaryotes to eukaryotes. Lipoylation is implicated
with several human diseases, including metabolic disorders, cancer,
and Alzheimer’s disease. While individual lipoylated proteins
have been biochemically studied, a strategy for globally quantifying
lipoylation with site-specific resolution in proteomes is still lacking.
Herein, we developed a butyraldehyde–alkynyl probe to specifically
label and enrich lipoylations in complexed biological samples. Combined
with a chemoproteomic pipeline using customized tandem enzyme digestions
and a biotin enrichment tag with enhanced ionization, we successfully
quantified all known lipoylation sites in both Escherichia
coli (E. coli) and
human proteomes. The strategy enabled us to dissect the dependence
of three evolutionarily related lipoylation sites in dihydrolipoamide
acetyltransferase (ODP2) in E. coli and evaluated the functional connection between the de novo lipoylation
synthetic pathway and the salvage pathway. Our chemoproteomic platform
provides a useful tool to monitor the state of lipoylation in proteome
samples, which will help decipher molecular mechanisms of lipoylation-related
diseases.