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Plant Phosphoproteomics

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Cover of 'Plant Phosphoproteomics'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
  2. Altmetric Badge
    Chapter 1 The Plant Kinome
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    Chapter 2 Phosphatases in plants.
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    Chapter 3 Phosphoproteomics in cereals.
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    Chapter 4 Screening of Kinase Substrates Using Kinase Knockout Mutants
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    Chapter 5 Phosphopeptide Profiling of Receptor Kinase Mutants
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    Chapter 6 Combining Metabolic (15)N Labeling with Improved Tandem MOAC for Enhanced Probing of the Phosphoproteome.
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    Chapter 7 Kinase activity and specificity assay using synthetic peptides.
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    Chapter 8 Absolute quantitation of protein posttranslational modification isoform.
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    Chapter 9 Phosphorylation Stoichiometry Determination in Plant Photosynthetic Membranes
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    Chapter 10 Phosphopeptide immuno-affinity enrichment to enhance detection of tyrosine phosphorylation in plants.
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    Chapter 11 The Peptide Microarray ChloroPhos1.0: A Screening Tool for the Identification of Arabidopsis thaliana Chloroplast Protein Kinase Substrates
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    Chapter 12 Plant Protein Kinase Substrates Identification Using Protein Microarrays
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    Chapter 13 Targeted Analysis of Protein Phosphorylation by 2D Electrophoresis.
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    Chapter 14 Computational phosphorylation network reconstruction: methods and resources.
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    Chapter 15 Computational Identification of Protein Kinases and Kinase-Specific Substrates in Plants
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    Chapter 16 Databases for plant phosphoproteomics.
  18. Altmetric Badge
    Chapter 17 Phosphorylation Site Prediction in Plants
Attention for Chapter 8: Absolute quantitation of protein posttranslational modification isoform.
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Chapter title
Absolute quantitation of protein posttranslational modification isoform.
Chapter number 8
Book title
Plant Phosphoproteomics
Published in
Methods in molecular biology, January 2015
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-2648-0_8
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4939-2647-3, 978-1-4939-2648-0
Authors

Yang, Zhu, Li, Ning, Zhu Yang, Ning Li

Abstract

Mass spectrometry has been widely applied in characterization and quantification of proteins from complex biological samples. Because the numbers of absolute amounts of proteins are needed in construction of mathematical models for molecular systems of various biological phenotypes and phenomena, a number of quantitative proteomic methods have been adopted to measure absolute quantities of proteins using mass spectrometry. The liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) coupled with internal peptide standards, i.e., the stable isotope-coded peptide dilution series, which was originated from the field of analytical chemistry, becomes a widely applied method in absolute quantitative proteomics research. This approach provides more and more absolute protein quantitation results of high confidence. As quantitative study of posttranslational modification (PTM) that modulates the biological activity of proteins is crucial for biological science and each isoform may contribute a unique biological function, degradation, and/or subcellular location, the absolute quantitation of protein PTM isoforms has become more relevant to its biological significance. In order to obtain the absolute cellular amount of a PTM isoform of a protein accurately, impacts of protein fractionation, protein enrichment, and proteolytic digestion yield should be taken into consideration and those effects before differentially stable isotope-coded PTM peptide standards are spiked into sample peptides have to be corrected. Assisted with stable isotope-labeled peptide standards, the absolute quantitation of isoforms of posttranslationally modified protein (AQUIP) method takes all these factors into account and determines the absolute amount of a protein PTM isoform from the absolute amount of the protein of interest and the PTM occupancy at the site of the protein. The absolute amount of the protein of interest is inferred by quantifying both the absolute amounts of a few PTM-site-independent peptides in the total cellular protein and their peptide yields. The PTM occupancy determination is achieved by measuring the absolute amounts of both PTM and non-PTM peptides from the highly purified protein sample expressed in transgenic organisms or directly isolated from an organism using affinity purification. The absolute amount of each PTM isoform in the total cellular protein extract is finally calculated from these two variables. Following this approach, the ion intensities given by mass spectrometers are used to calculated the peptide amounts, from which the amounts of protein isoforms are then deduced. In this chapter, we describe the principles underlying the experimental design and procedures used in AQUIP method. This quantitation method basically employs stable isotope-labeled peptide standards and affinity purification from a tagged recombinant protein of interest. Other quantitation strategies and purification techniques related to this method are also discussed.

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Mendeley readers

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 12 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 3 25%
Lecturer > Senior Lecturer 2 17%
Student > Bachelor 2 17%
Student > Ph. D. Student 2 17%
Student > Master 1 8%
Other 1 8%
Unknown 1 8%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 3 25%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 2 17%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science 2 17%
Chemistry 2 17%
Computer Science 1 8%
Other 1 8%
Unknown 1 8%
Attention Score in Context

Attention Score in Context

This research output has an Altmetric Attention Score of 1. This is our high-level measure of the quality and quantity of online attention that it has received. This Attention Score, as well as the ranking and number of research outputs shown below, was calculated when the research output was last mentioned on 26 January 2016.
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#20,271,607
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#9,905
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Outputs of similar age from Methods in molecular biology
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