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Dynamic Phosphotyrosine-Dependent Signaling Profiling in Living Cells by Two-Dimensional Proximity Proteomics.

Qian KongMi KeYicheng WengYunqiu QinAn HePengfei LiZongwei CaiRui-Jun Tian
Published in: Journal of proteome research (2022)
Tyrosine phosphorylation (pTyr)-dependent signaling pathways play a vital role in various biological processes, which are spatiotemporally assembled and dynamically regulated on a minute scale by pTyr in living cells. Studying these pTyr-mediated signaling complexes is therefore challenging due to the highly dynamic nature of the protein complexes and the low abundance of pTyr. In this study, we adopted minute-resolution APEX2-based proximity labeling (PL) in living cells and Src SH2 superbinder-based pTyr peptide enrichment for simultaneously profiling these protein complexes and associated pTyr sites from the same affinity-purified sample. Upon different time courses of EGF stimulation of the living cells stably expressing APEX2-FLAG-GRB2, we constructed two-dimensional time-course curves for both interactome and tyrosine phosphoproteome. Well-annotated pTyr signaling complexes in EGFR signaling and located at the endosome were quantified with tightly correlated time-course curves for both interacting proteins and pTyr sites. Importantly, the correlated time-course curves for EGFR and endosomal HGS were well validated by targeted-parallel reaction monitoring (PRM)-MS analysis. Taking advantage of the high sensitivity of the PRM assay, the low-abundant pTyr peptide EGFR pY1110, which cannot be identified in the data-dependent acquisition (DDA) analysis, could be well quantified. Collectively, this two-dimensional proximity proteomic strategy is promising for comprehensively characterizing pTyr-mediated protein complexes with high sensitivity in living cells.
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