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Proteomic Profiling

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Cover of 'Proteomic Profiling'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 Mechanical/Physical Methods of Cell Distribution and Tissue Homogenization
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    Chapter 2 Sample Preservation Through Heat Stabilization of Proteins: Principles and Examples
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    Chapter 3 Isolating Peripheral Lymphocytes by Density Gradient Centrifugation and Magnetic Cell Sorting
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    Chapter 4 Investigating the Adipose Tissue Secretome: A Protocol to Generate High-Quality Samples Appropriate for Comprehensive Proteomic Profiling
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    Chapter 5 Methods for proteomics-based analysis of the human muscle secretome using an in vitro exercise model.
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    Chapter 6 Urinary Pellet Sample Preparation for Shotgun Proteomic Analysis of Microbial Infection and Host–Pathogen Interactions
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    Chapter 7 A Protocol for the Parallel Isolation of Intact Mitochondria from Rat Liver, Kidney, Heart, and Brain
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    Chapter 8 Isolation of Mitochondria from Cultured Cells and Liver Tissue Biopsies for Molecular and Biochemical Analyses
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    Chapter 9 Dynamic Range Compression with ProteoMiner™: Principles and Examples
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    Chapter 10 Qualitative and Quantitative Proteomic Analysis of Formalin-Fixed Paraffin-Embedded (FFPE) Tissue
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    Chapter 11 Full-Length Protein Extraction Protocols and Gel-Based Downstream Applications in Formalin-Fixed Tissue Proteomics
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    Chapter 12 Enrichment of Low-Abundant Protein Targets by Immunoprecipitation Upstream of Mass Spectrometry
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    Chapter 13 Principles of Protein Labeling Techniques
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    Chapter 14 Isolation of extracellular vesicles for proteomic profiling.
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    Chapter 15 A Protocol for Exosome Isolation and Characterization: Evaluation of Ultracentrifugation, Density-Gradient Separation, and Immunoaffinity Capture Methods
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    Chapter 16 Chloroplast Isolation and Affinity Chromatography for Enrichment of Low-Abundant Proteins in Complex Proteomes
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    Chapter 17 Depletion of RuBisCO Protein Using the Protamine Sulfate Precipitation Method
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    Chapter 18 Step-by-Step Preparation of Proteins for Mass Spectrometric Analysis
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    Chapter 19 Identification of Protein N-Termini Using TMPP or Dimethyl Labeling and Mass Spectrometry
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    Chapter 20 Optimization of Cell Lysis and Protein Digestion Protocols for Protein Analysis by LC-MS/MS
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    Chapter 21 Comprehensive Protocol to Simultaneously Study Protein Phosphorylation, Acetylation, and N-Linked Sialylated Glycosylation
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    Chapter 22 Protein Profiling and Phosphoprotein Analysis by Isoelectric Focusing
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    Chapter 23 Principles and Examples of Gel-Based Approaches for Phosphoprotein Analysis
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    Chapter 24 Neutral Phosphate-Affinity SDS-PAGE System for Profiling of Protein Phosphorylation
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    Chapter 25 Proteomic Profiling
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    Chapter 26 In-Gel Peptide IEF Sample Preparation for LC/MS Analysis
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    Chapter 27 Proteomic Profiling
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    Chapter 28 2-D Western Blotting for Evaluation of Antibodies Developed for Detection of Host Cell Protein
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    Chapter 29 Free Flow Electrophoresis for Separation of Native Membrane Protein Complexes
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    Chapter 30 Three-Dimensional Electrophoresis for Quantitative Profiling of Complex Proteomes
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    Chapter 31 A Bead-Based Multiplex Sandwich Immunoassay to Assess the Abundance and Posttranslational Modification State of β-Catenin
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    Chapter 32 Identification of SUMO E3 Ligase-Specific Substrates Using the HuProt Human Proteome Microarray.
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    Chapter 33 Amyloid-binding proteins: affinity-based separation, proteomic identification, and optical biosensor validation.
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    Chapter 34 Proteomic profiling by nanomaterials-based matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry for high-resolution data and novel protein information directly from biological samples.
Attention for Chapter 21: Comprehensive Protocol to Simultaneously Study Protein Phosphorylation, Acetylation, and N-Linked Sialylated Glycosylation
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Chapter title
Comprehensive Protocol to Simultaneously Study Protein Phosphorylation, Acetylation, and N-Linked Sialylated Glycosylation
Chapter number 21
Book title
Proteomic Profiling
Published in
Methods in molecular biology, January 2015
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-2550-6_21
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4939-2549-0, 978-1-4939-2550-6
Authors

Marcella Nunes Melo-Braga, María Ibáñez-Vea, Martin Røssel Larsen, Katarzyna Kulej

Abstract

Post-translational modifications (PTMs) such as phosphorylation, acetylation, and glycosylation are an essential regulatory mechanism of protein function and they are associated with a range of biological processes. Since most PTMs alter the molecular mass of a protein, mass spectrometry (MS) is the ideal analytical tool for studying various PTMs. However, PTMs are generally present in substoichiometric levels and therefore their unmodified counterpart often suppresses their signal in MS. Consequently, PTM analysis by MS is a challenging task requiring highly specialized and sensitive enrichment methods. Currently, several methods have been implemented for PTM enrichment and each of them has its drawbacks and advantages as they differ in selectivity and specificity toward specific protein modifications. Unfortunately, for most of the more than 300 known modifications we have none or poor tools for selective enrichment.Here, we describe a comprehensive workflow to simultaneously study phosphorylation, acetylation, and N-linked sialylated glycosylation from the same biological sample. The protocol involves an initial titanium dioxide (TiO2) step to enrich for phosphopeptides and sialylated N-linked glycopeptides followed by glycan release and post-fractionation using sequential elution from immobilized metal affinity chromatography (SIMAC) to separate mono-phosphorylated and deglycosylated peptides from multi-phosphorylated ones. The IMAC flow-through and acidic elution is subsequently subjected to a next round of TiO2 enrichment for further separation of mono-phosphopeptides from deglycosylated peptides. In addition, the acetylated peptides present in the first TiO2 flow-through are enriched by immunoprecipitation (IP). Finally, the samples are fractionated by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) to reduce sample complexity and increase the coverage during LC-MS/MS analysis. This allows the analysis of multiple types of modifications from the same highly complex biological sample without decreasing the quality of each individual PTM study.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 22 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 22 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 5 23%
Student > Master 4 18%
Student > Doctoral Student 3 14%
Student > Bachelor 2 9%
Other 2 9%
Other 4 18%
Unknown 2 9%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 5 23%
Chemistry 4 18%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 3 14%
Medicine and Dentistry 2 9%
Computer Science 1 5%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 7 32%