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Abstract

The detection and quantification of protein-ligand binding interactions is crucial in a number of different areas of biochemical research from fundamental studies of biological processes to drug discovery efforts. Described here is a protocol that can be used to identify the protein targets of biologically relevant ligands (e.g., drugs such as tamoxifen or cyclosporin A) in complex protein mixtures such as cell lysates. The protocol utilizes quantitative, bottom-up, shotgun proteomics technologies (isobaric mass tags for relative and absolute quantification, or iTRAQ) with a covalent labeling technique, termed stability of proteins from rates of oxidation (SPROX). In SPROX, the thermodynamic properties of proteins and protein-ligand complexes are assessed using the hydrogen peroxide-mediated oxidation of methionine residues as a function of the chemical denaturant (e.g., guanidine hydrochloride or urea) concentration. The proteome-wide SPROX experiments described here enable the ligand-binding properties of hundreds of proteins to be simultaneously assayed in the context of complex biological samples. The proteomic capabilities of the protocol render it amenable to the detection of both the on- and off-target effects of ligand binding. The protocol can be completed in 5 d.

Details

Title
Thermodynamic analysis of protein-ligand binding interactions in complex biological mixtures using the stability of proteins from rates of oxidation
Author
Strickland, Erin C; Geer, M Ariel; Tran, Duc T; Adhikari, Jagat; West, Graham M; Dearmond, Patrick D; Xu, Ying; Fitzgerald, Michael C
Pages
148-61
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jan 2013
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
17542189
e-ISSN
17502799
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1241061903
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jan 2013