Reimagining high-throughput profiling of reactive cysteines for cell-based screening of large electrophile libraries.
Miljan KuljaninDylan C MitchellDevin K SchweppeAjami S GikandiDavid P NusinowNathan J BullochEkaterina V VinogradovaDavid L WilsonEric T KoolJoseph D ManciasBenjamin F CravattSteven P GygiPublished in: Nature biotechnology (2021)
Current methods used for measuring amino acid side-chain reactivity lack the throughput needed to screen large chemical libraries for interactions across the proteome. Here we redesigned the workflow for activity-based protein profiling of reactive cysteine residues by using a smaller desthiobiotin-based probe, sample multiplexing, reduced protein starting amounts and software to boost data acquisition in real time on the mass spectrometer. Our method, streamlined cysteine activity-based protein profiling (SLC-ABPP), achieved a 42-fold improvement in sample throughput, corresponding to profiling library members at a depth of >8,000 reactive cysteine sites at 18 min per compound. We applied it to identify proteome-wide targets of covalent inhibitors to mutant Kirsten rat sarcoma (KRAS)G12C and Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK). In addition, we created a resource of cysteine reactivity to 285 electrophiles in three human cell lines, which includes >20,000 cysteines from >6,000 proteins per line. The goal of proteome-wide profiling of cysteine reactivity across thousand-member libraries under several cellular contexts is now within reach.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- tyrosine kinase
- high throughput
- amino acid
- living cells
- fluorescent probe
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- endothelial cells
- protein protein
- mesenchymal stem cells
- binding protein
- high resolution
- optical coherence tomography
- bone marrow
- small molecule
- mass spectrometry
- data analysis
- single molecule
- cell therapy