posted on 2017-11-14, 00:00authored byHumberto Gonczarowska-Jorge, Stefan Loroch, Margherita Dell’Aica, Albert Sickmann, Andreas Roos, René P. Zahedi
Despite
huge efforts to map the human proteome using mass spectrometry
the overall sequence coverage achieved to date is still below 50%.
Reasons for missing areas of the proteome comprise protease-resistant
domains including the lack/excess of enzymatic cleavage sites, nonunique
peptide sequences, impaired peptide ionization/separation and low
expression levels. To access novel areas of the proteome the beneficial
use of enzymes complementary to trypsin, such as Glu-C, Asp-N, Lys-N,
Arg-C, LysargiNase has been reported. Here, we present how the broad-specificity
protease subtilisin enables mapping of previously hidden areas of
the proteome. We systematically evaluated its digestion efficiency
and reproducibility and compared it to the gold standard in the field,
trypsin. Notably, subtilisin allows reproducible near-complete digestion
of cells lysates in 1–5 min. As expected from its broad specificity
the generation of overlapping peptide sequences reduces the number
of identified proteins compared to trypsin (8363 vs 6807; 1% protein
FDR). However, subtilisin considerably improved the coverage of missing
and particularly proline-rich areas of the proteome. Along 14 628
high confidence phosphorylation sites identified in total, only 33%
were shared between both enzymes, while 37% were exclusive to subtilisin.
Notably, 926 of these were not even accessible by additional in silico
digestion with either Asp-N, Arg-C, Glu-C, Lys-C, or Lys-N. Thus,
subtilisin might be particularly beneficial for system-wide profiling
of post-translational modification sites. Finally, we demonstrate
that subtilisin can be used for reporter-ion based in-depth quantification,
providing a precision comparable to trypsindespite broad specificity
and fast digestion that may increase technical variance.