Highly Efficient Separation of Methylated Peptides
Utilizing Selective Complexation between Lysine and 18-Crown‑6
Posted on 2020-11-10 - 16:34
Protein
methylation is one of the most common and important post-translational
modifications, and it plays vital roles in epigenetic regulation,
signal transduction, and chromatin metabolism. However, due to the
diversity of methylation forms, slight difference between methylated
sites and nonmodified ones, and ultralow abundance, it is extraordinarily
challenging to capture and separate methylated peptides from biological
samples. Here, we introduce a simple and highly efficient method to
separate methylated and nonmethylated peptides using 18-crown-6 as
a mobile phase additive in high-performance liquid chromatography.
Selective complexation between lysine and 18-crown-6 remarkably increases
the retention of the peptides on a C18 stationary phase, leading to
an excellent baseline separation between the lysine methylated and
nonmethylated peptides. A possible binding mechanism is verified by
nuclear magnetic resonance titration, biolayer interferometry technology,
and quantum chemistry calculation. Through establishment of a simple
enrichment methodology, a good selectivity is achieved and four methylated
peptides with greatly improved signal-to-noise (S/N) ratios are successfully
separated from a complex peptide sample containing 10-fold bovine
serum albumin tryptic digests. By selecting rLys N as an enzyme to
digest histone, methylation information in the histone could be well
identified based on our enrichment method. This study will open an
avenue and provide a novel insight for selective enrichment of lysine
methylated peptides in post-translational modification proteomics.
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Sheng, Qianying; Wang, Cunli; Li, Xiaopei; Qin, Hongqiang; Ye, Mingliang; Xiong, Yuting; et al. (2020). Highly Efficient Separation of Methylated Peptides
Utilizing Selective Complexation between Lysine and 18-Crown‑6. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c04158