Proteomic and mass spectroscopic quantitation of protein S-nitrosation differentiates NO-donors

ACS Chem Biol. 2010 Jul 16;5(7):667-80. doi: 10.1021/cb100054m.

Abstract

Protein S-nitrosation has been argued to be the most important signaling pathway mediating the bioactivity of NO. This post-translational modification of protein thiols is the result of chemical nitrosation of cysteine residues. The term NO-donors covers very different chemical classes, from clinical therapeutics to probes of routine use in chemical biology; their different chemistry is predicted to result in distinctive biology regulated by protein S-nitrosation. To measure the extent of protein S-nitrosation by NO-donors, a proteomic mass spectrometry method was developed, which quantitates free thiol versus nitrosothiol for each modified cysteine residue, coined d-Switch. This method is adapted from the biotin switch (BST) method, used extensively to identify S-nitrosated proteins in complex biological mixtures; however, BST does not quantitate free thiol. Since glutathione-S-transferase P1-1 (GST-P1) has been proposed to be a biological "NO-carrier", GST-P1 was used as a reporter protein. The 5 different chemical classes of NO-donors compared by d-Switch demonstrated very different profiles of protein S-nitrosation and response to O(2) and cysteine, although all NO-donors were oxidants toward GST-P1. The low limits of detection and the ability to use established MS database searching allowed facile generalization of the d-Switch method. Therefore after incubation of neuronal cell cultures with nitrosothiol, it was possible to quantitate not only S-nitrosation of GST-P1 but also many other proteins, including novel targets such as ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal esterase L1 (UCHL1). Moreover, d-Switch also allowed identification of non-nitrosated proteins and quantitation of degree of nitrosation for individual protein thiols.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Biotin / analogs & derivatives
  • Biotin / metabolism
  • Cells, Cultured
  • Cysteine / analogs & derivatives
  • Cysteine / chemistry
  • Cysteine / metabolism
  • Glutathione S-Transferase pi / metabolism*
  • Humans
  • Mass Spectrometry
  • Neuroblastoma / metabolism
  • Nitric Oxide / metabolism*
  • Nitric Oxide Donors / chemistry*
  • Nitric Oxide Donors / metabolism
  • Nitrosation
  • Proteins / chemistry*
  • Proteins / metabolism
  • Proteomics
  • S-Nitrosoglutathione / metabolism
  • S-Nitrosothiols / chemistry
  • S-Nitrosothiols / metabolism
  • S-Nitrosothiols / pharmacology

Substances

  • Nitric Oxide Donors
  • Proteins
  • S-Nitrosothiols
  • Nitric Oxide
  • S-Nitrosoglutathione
  • Biotin
  • S-nitrosocysteine
  • Glutathione S-Transferase pi
  • Cysteine