1 proteomics abc 23,000 genes in the genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by exon splicing...

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1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing 300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range Cell 10 6 , Plasma 10 12 The Dynamic Proteome Temporal (milliseconds, month) Spatial (cell, organelle), Developmental (100+ cell types in the body, years) All proteins exist in dynamic complexes This determines their function and is highly dynamic

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Page 1: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

1

Proteomics ABC

• 23,000 genes in the Genome but– ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing

– 300+ Post-translational modifications

• Dynamic Range– Cell 106, Plasma 1012

• The Dynamic Proteome– Temporal (milliseconds, month)– Spatial (cell, organelle),– Developmental (100+ cell types in the body, years)– All proteins exist in dynamic complexes – This determines their function and is highly dynamic

Page 2: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

2

Gene (DNA)

Transcription(gene expression)

~23,000 genes

Post-translationalmodifications ofproteins

P

P B1

B3

P

S B2

B4

phosphorylation

glycosylationhe

tero

geni

tyconfirmation

~500,000 proteins

Translation

protein Cprotein A protein B

mRNA(alternative splicing)

form A form Cform B

~150,000 proteins

Human Proteomics: many proteins, few genes

Page 3: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

3 3

Proteomics: The 2-D PAGE-MS Workflow

Sample Prep

Image analysis

Sample labelling

Automated spot picking

Spot digestion

MALDI spotting

Image acquisition

SeparationSpecificdetection

Spot Handling Workstation

Protein IDwithMALDI-ToF

Laboratory workflow system

Page 4: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

4

Proteomics: The LC-MS Based Workflow

LC based workflow

Samplepreparation

Protein pre-fractionation, Protein depletionGroup-specific protein enrichment

Protein digestion

RT: 0.00 - 147.01

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Time (min)

0

20

40

60

80

100

0

20

40

60

80

100

Re

lative

Ab

un

da

nce 0

20

40

60

80

10052.6632.77

18.84 46.16 57.14

44.10

12.57

1.57 75.8658.03 87.56 129.57121.87 137.2296.28

41.06

26.8522.22

13.3432.88

50.9312.54 128.3954.17 132.4157.88 75.96 87.63 124.3989.932.55

18.5217.01

42.0727.731.34

1.89 30.91 75.8650.18 57.70

76.9914.82 87.6770.04 134.87129.1497.96 113.09

NL:4.05E9

Base Peak MS yeast_120ming_05

NL:3.24E9

Base Peak MS yeast_120ming_06

NL:1.02E9

Base Peak MS yeast_120ming_07

Proteinidentification & characterization

Multidimensional nanoscalepeptide separation

Page 5: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

5

Complementary approaches

•Limited sensitivity in MS, because of in-gel digestion

•Many samples analysed because of parallel runs

•Separation and display of intact proteins

•Information on protein isoforms and PTMs available

•Higher sensitivity because of in-liquid digestion

•Fewer samples analysed (ca.12 hours / sample

•Analysis of peptides

•PTMs and protein isoforms not directly displayed

2DE-MS approach vs. MDLC-MS approach

Page 6: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

6

Gene Expression

Central dogma of molecular biology

Page 7: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

7

Gene Structure

Page 8: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

8

Post-translational modifications

• Proteolytic cleavage– Fragmenting protein

• Addition of chemical groups

– Phosphorylation: activation and inactivation of enzymes– Acetylation: protein stability, used in histones– Methylation: regulation of gene expression– Glycosylation: cell–cell recognition, signaling– GPI anchor: membrane tethering– Hydroxyproline: protein stability, ligand interactions– Sulfation: protein–protein and ligand interactions– Disulfide-bond formation: protein stability– Deamidation: protein–protein and ligand interactions– Ubiquitination: destruction signal– Nitration of tyrosine: inflammation

Page 9: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

9

Primary Structure

Page 10: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

10

Secondary Structure -Alpha Helices

Page 11: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

11

Secondary Structure -Beta sheets

Page 12: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

12

Tertiary and Quaternary Structure

Tertiary structure - fold of a given chain Quaternary structure - protein functional unit

Page 13: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

13

Protein Structure

• Protein structure can be divided into:- Primary (amino acid sequence)

- Secondary (local folding structure)- Tertiary (overall fold of amino acid chain)- Quaternary (subunits composing functional protein)

mRNA: 5’-AUGGCUUGUUUACGAAUU... - 3’3 letter code: NH2-Met-Ala-Cys-Leu-Arg-Ile-... COOH

1 letter code MACLRI...

Page 14: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

14

Hydrophobic Amino Acids

Aliphatic Aromatic

Neutral

Sulphur-containing

Page 15: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

15

Hydrophilic Amino Acids

PolarCharged

Semi-charged

Page 16: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

16

Acid-Base Properties of Amino Acids

•All amino acids have acidic andbasic functional groups– carboxyl group is acidic– amino group is basic

• Amino acids that lack charged Rgroups are zwitterions at neutral pH

• Aspartic and glutamic acids are negatively charged at neutral pH

•Arginine and lysine are positively charged at neutral pH

Page 17: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

17

What it pKa?

• The pKa for a functional group is the pH at which the acidic or basic group on 50% of the molecules in a solution are ionised

•Amino acids can ionise their N-terminal amino group, the C-terminal carboxy group and sometimes the side chains

•At neutral pH 7, the charges are:Asp, Glu -1 (pKa = 3.9, 4.3)His +1/0 (pKa = 6.0)Cys 0/-1 (pKa = 8.3)Arg, Lys +1 (pKa = 12.5, 10.5)Tyr 0 (pKa = 10.1)

Page 18: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

18

Principle of Electrophoresis

• v = E• v = migration velocity (cm/s)

• = electrophoretic mobility (cm2/Vs)–charge, size, shape of molecule,–viscosity, pore size, buffer pH and –ionic strength, temperature of medium

• E = electric field strength (V/cm)

• Power = Voltage Current

-

Page 19: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

19

Courses of Electric Parameters

vo lta g e [V ] (d isc -e le c tro p h o re sis.)

vo lta g e [V ] (IEF)

m a x. 2 0 0 0 V (IEF)

m a x. 6 0 0 V (e le c tro p h o re sis)

m a x. 5 0 m A

m a x. 3 5 W

c u rre n t [m A ]

3 0 m in 1 h : 3 0 m in1 h 2 h

p o w e r [W ]

tim e

Page 20: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

20

Electrophoresis Systems

Vertical Horizontal

Page 21: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

21

Electrophoretic methodspH

= c

onst

= A

= B

pI

pI

A

B

m

m

R

R

A

B

pH

=

pH

LT

Zone E lectrophoresis Isotachophoresis

pH

gra

die

nt

3

4 5

6

7

8

9

10

A and B are sam ple com ponents.

Page 22: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

22

Isoelectric Focusing

Protein Separation according to Isoelectric Point-(pI) the pH at which the number of + and -charges are the same

Page 23: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

23

Gel Additives

•Glycerol, Sucrose

• IPG buffers

•Reducing Reagents (DTT, 2-mercaptoethanol)

•Urea

•Non-Ionic Detergents (TritonX-100, Brij-)

•Zwitterionic Detergents (CHAPS)

•Anionic Detergents (SDS)

•Cationic Detergents (CTAB)

•Organic Solvents (e.g. DMSO)

•Enzymes, Substrates

Page 24: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

24 4-May-04

Free carrier ampholytes (CA-IEF)

Pharmalytes®

Ampholine®

before start in the e lectric fie ld

pH

separation d istance

pH

separation d istance

pH

separation d istance

increasing pI

carrier am pholytes

Page 25: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

25

Isoelectric Focusing

Page 26: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

26 4-May-04

Isoelectric focusing: procedure

• Prefocusing

• Location of sample loading

• Mode of sample loading

• Sample entry

• Separation temperature

• Separation time

• Fixing and staining

Page 27: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

27

IEF with carrier ampholytes

gel

PharmalytesAmpholines

decreasing pI

electricfield

long IEFtime

where R = Hor - (CH ) - COOH,x = 2 or 3

Page 28: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

28

The Cathodal Drift

Page 29: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

29 29-Apr-04

Titration Curves

• Cathode

Anode

pH 3 pH 10

Page 30: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

30

Limitations of IEF with carrier ampholytes

• Gradient drift causes loss of basic & acidic proteins

• Reproducibility of the first dimension in 2D-PAGE

• Protein loading capacity of gel rods

• Ultranarrow intervals are not stable

Page 31: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

31

Immobilized pH gradients (IPG)

Immobiline Gels(0.5 mm gel layerson film supports)

Acrylamido buffers: Immobiline®

CH2=CH-CO-NH-R,

R contains a carboxylic

or a tertiary amino group

Page 32: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

32 4-May-04

Features of Immobilized pH Gradients

• Few acrylamide derivatives

• No gradient drift

• Tailor-made gradients

• Very narrow gradients possible: e.g. pH 4.2-4.4

• Stable basic pH gradients

• Gradient profile is stable

• True equilibrium method

• High loading capacity

• IEF in narrow strips

Page 33: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

33

Conventional and Universal Strip Holders

Cup-loading stripholders

Regular stripholders

Page 34: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

34

2-D Electrophoresis, Immobiline DryStrips and Buffers

Page 35: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

35

Agarose IEF of fish sarcoplasm proteins

+

-

pH 3.5

pH 9.5

Page 36: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

36

SDS Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis

Separation according to the Molecular Weights

Page 37: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

37

Gel structures and compositions

AGAROSE POLYACRYLAMIDEGelation of the polysaccharide sol by chilling Chemical polymerisation of acrylamide monomers and

NN´-methylenbisacrylamide (Bis)

1% agarose (w/v) ca. 150 nm;0.16 % agarose (w/v) ca. 500 nm.

→ ∅→ ∅

→ ∅

Total acrylamide concentrationand Crosslinking:

T = 100 [%]; C = 100 [%]a + ba + b

a:g acrylamide; b:g Bis;V: volume in mL

5 % T / 3 % C 5 nm

× ×V

b

Page 38: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

38

SDS sample preparation

nonreducing SDS treatment

1 - 2 % (w/v) SDS

native

reducing SDS treatment

1 - 2 % (w/v) SDS+ DTT, DTE or 2-mercaptoethanol

3 min at 95 C

reducing SDS treatment and alkylation

1 - 2 % (w/v) SDS

+ DTT, DTE or 2-mercaptoethanol3 min at 95 C

+ iodoacetamide or vinylpyridine

o o

Page 39: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

39

Molecular weight standards

• Peptide Markers (P)

– 2.5 - 17 kDa

• Low Molecular Weight (L)

– 14 - 94 kDa

• High Molecular Weight (H)

– 53 - 212 kDa

• Rainbow Markers (R) 10 - 250 kDa

R

Page 40: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

40

Protein polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis PAGE

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Page 41: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

41

Disc electrophoresis

Page 42: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

42

Discontinuous electrophoresis

Page 43: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

43

Problems with Polyacrylamide Gels

•Toxic Monomers

–Acrylamide, Bis, ammonium persulphate

•Polymerization effectiveness

–temperature, acrylamide concentration, pH value,oxigen, inhibitors (additives, boric acid),quality of chemicals

•Chemicals in the matrix

–monomers, ammonium persulphate, ions

•Shelf life

–pH value must be below pH 7

•Limitation in pore size

Page 44: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

44 Add Title Here 8 pt. Arial

Practical hints for vertical PAGE

•NO HCl in cathode buffer!

•glycine in anode buffer not necessary

•overlayering the gel edge

•prerun only with Tris-HCl

•open cassette with WonderWedge

Page 45: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

45 Add Title Here 8 pt. Arial

Practical hints for SDS PAGE

•add reducing reagent after boiling

•scavenge excess reducing reagent with iodoacetamide

•treat sample at high pH (8 — 8.8)

•use at least 2 % SDS

•do not boil nonreduced samples

•use DTT or DTE instead of 2-mercaptoethanol

Page 46: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

46

Cell-Map Proteomics

Page 47: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

47

Systematic Complex pull-downs

Page 48: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

48

Final verified complex

Page 49: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

49

Zooming the Picture Out

Page 50: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

50

The Big Picture

Page 51: 1 Proteomics ABC 23,000 genes in the Genome but –ca. 1,000,000 proteins caused by Exon splicing –300+ Post-translational modifications Dynamic Range –Cell

51 29-Apr-04

Preparative IEF on Multiphor

• Flatbed Focusing in Sephadex G-200 superfine

–with standard equipment (Multiphor)

–high loading capacity (1 g)

–many applications

–not sensitive to precipitated protein

–recovery from dextran gel easy