AzidoTMT Enables Direct Enrichment and Highly Multiplexed Quantitation of Proteome-Wide Functional Residues.
Taylur P MaAnita Izrael-TomasevicRana MroueHanna BudayevaSushant MalhotraRyan RaisnerMarie EvangelistaChristopher M RoseDonald S KirkpatrickKebing YuPublished in: Journal of proteome research (2023)
Recent advances in targeted covalent inhibitors have aroused significant interest for their potential in drug development for difficult therapeutic targets. Proteome-wide profiling of functional residues is an integral step of covalent drug discovery aimed at defining actionable sites and evaluating compound selectivity in cells. A classical workflow for this purpose is called IsoTOP-ABPP, which employs an activity-based probe and two isotopically labeled azide-TEV-biotin tags to mark, enrich, and quantify proteome from two samples. Here we report a novel isobaric 11plex-AzidoTMT reagent and a new workflow, named AT-MAPP, that significantly expands multiplexing power as compared to the original isoTOP-ABPP. We demonstrate its application in identifying cysteine on- and off-targets using a KRAS G12C covalent inhibitor ARS-1620. However, changes in some of these hits can be explained by modulation at the protein and post-translational levels. Thus, it would be crucial to interrogate site-level bona fide changes in concurrence to proteome-level changes for corroboration. In addition, we perform a multiplexed covalent fragment screening using four acrylamide-based compounds as a proof-of-concept. This study identifies a diverse set of liganded cysteine residues in a compound-dependent manner with an average hit rate of 0.07% in intact cell. Lastly, we screened 20 sulfonyl fluoride-based compounds to demonstrate that the AT-MAPP assay is flexible for noncysteine functional residues such as tyrosine and lysine. Overall, we envision that 11plex-AzidoTMT will be a useful addition to the current toolbox for activity-based protein profiling and covalent drug development.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- drug discovery
- living cells
- high throughput
- induced apoptosis
- amino acid
- electronic health record
- stem cells
- protein protein
- quantum dots
- ms ms
- cell cycle arrest
- fluorescent probe
- mass spectrometry
- cell therapy
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- binding protein
- climate change
- high performance liquid chromatography
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- signaling pathway
- wild type
- high resolution
- cell death
- tandem mass spectrometry
- solid state
- small molecule
- liquid chromatography