The potent lipid mediator sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) regulates diverse physiological processes by binding to 5 specific GPCRs, although it also has intracellular targets. Here, we demonstrate that S1P, produced in the mitochondria mainly by sphingosine kinase 2 (SphK2), binds with high affinity and specificity to prohibitin 2 (PHB2), a highly conserved protein that regulates mitochondrial assembly and function. In contrast, S1P did not bind to the closely related protein PHB1, which forms large, multimeric complexes with PHB2. In mitochondria from SphK2-null mice, a new aberrant band of cytochrome-c oxidase was detected by blue native PAGE, and interaction between subunit IV of cytochrome-c oxidase and PHB2 was greatly reduced. Moreover, depletion of SphK2 or PHB2 led to a dysfunction in mitochondrial respiration through cytochrome-c oxidase. Our data point to a new action of S1P in mitochondria and suggest that interaction of S1P with homomeric PHB2 is important for cytochrome-c oxidase assembly and mitochondrial respiration.
Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is currently dominated by the analysis of peptides originating either from digestion of proteins separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE) or from global digestion; the simple peptide mixtures obtained from digestion of gel-separated proteins do not usually require further separation, while the complex peptide mixtures obtained by global digestion are most frequently separated by chromatographic techniques. Capillary electrophoresis (CE) provides alternatives to 2-DE for protein separation and alternatives to chromatography for peptide separation. This review attempts to elucidate how the most promising CE modes, capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) and capillary isoelectric focusing (CIEF), might best be applied to MS-based proteomics. CE-MS interfacing, mass analyzer performance, column coating to minimize analyte adsorption, and sample stacking for CZE are considered prior to examining numerous applications. Finally, multidimensional systems that incorporate CE techniques are examined; CZE often finds use as a fast, final dimension before ionization for MS, while CIEF, being an equilibrium technique, is well-suited to being the first dimension in automated fractionation systems.
The proton affinities of the 20 common amino acids have been computed at the G3MP2 level using structures derived from broad conformational searches at a variety of levels including G3MP2. In some cases, the conformational surveys identified more stable species than had been used in previous studies of proton affinities, though the differences in energy are sometimes rather small. The present values are likely the most reliable measure of amino acid proton affinities in the gas phase. An analysis of differences between these values and those obtained experimentally via the kinetic method indicates that the extraction of proton affinities from kinetic method data can potentially lead to large errors linked to the estimation of relative protonation entropies. . As noted by these authors, there is substantial variation in the experimental values reported for these species. The origin of this variability is most likely related to the difficulties of completing thermodynamic measurements in the gas phase on materials with low volatility. As a result, many of the experimental values are from kinetic method measurements and are subject to errors associated with the kinetic method approximation (as well as cumulative errors associated with the development of ladder-type scales). Therefore, in these systems, high-level computational work offers an attractive means of resolving differences in the various experimental measurements.While working on a computational study of the conformational preferences of neutral, gaseous amino acids, we realized that it would be possible to improve on the accuracy of the proton affinities reported by Paizs and coworkers. First, their computational strategy relied on the B3LYP approach to identify global minima and, often, they identified conformations for the neutral amino acids that did not match with those reported in previous computational and experimental studies (apparently in some cases this was the result of the search strategy and in others the computational method). For example, Paizs and coworkers concluded that glycine prefers a structure with an internal hydrogen bond between the carboxylic acid and amine groups. Highlevel ab initio, other B3LYP data [2], and experimental data suggest a structure with a syn carboxyl group and a weak interaction between the amine hydrogens and the carbonyl [3][4][5]. While the energetic impact of this problem is generally minor, we feel it is important to report values based on the most appropriate conformations that can be obtained within a computational method. For the protonated amino acids, this problem is less pronounced because the hydrogen bonding interactions are much stronger; most computational methods identify similar structures as the global minimum. Second, values reported by Paizs and coworkers are at 0 K. We have added a correction for the thermal energy of a proton, which amounts to about 1.5 kcal/mol at 298 K, as well as for the neutral and protonated amino acid. Although these corrections cancel to some extent and while the ge...
We investigated the combination of weak anion exchange (WAX) fractionation and on-line reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) separation using a 12 T FTICR mass spectrometer for the detection of intact proteins from a Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 cell lysate. This work aimed at optimizing intact protein detection for profiling proteins at a level that incorporates their modification state. A total of 715 intact proteins were detected, and the combined results from the WAX fractions and the unfractionated cell lysate were aligned using LC-MS features to facilitate protein abundance measurements. Protein identifications and post-translational modifications were assigned for approximately 10% of the detected proteins by comparing intact protein mass measurements to proteins identified in peptide MS/MS analysis of an aliquot of the same fraction. Intact proteins were also detected for S. oneidensis lysates obtained from cells grown on 13C-, 15N-depleted media under aerobic and sub-oxic conditions. The strategy can be readily applied for measuring differential protein abundances and provides a platform for high-throughput selection of biologically relevant targets for further characterization.
Bottom-up proteomics (analyzing peptides that result from protein digestion) has demonstrated capability for broad proteome coverage and good throughput. However, due to incomplete sequence coverage, this approach is not ideally suited to the study of modified proteins. The modification complement of a protein can best be elucidated by analyzing the intact protein. 2-DE, typically coupled with the analysis of peptides that result from in-gel digestion, is the most frequently applied protein separation technique in MS-based proteomics. As an alternative, numerous column-based liquid phase techniques, which are generally more amenable to automation, are being investigated. In this work, the combination of size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) fractionation with RPLC-Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR)-MS is compared with the combination of RPLC fractionation with CIEF-FTICR-MS for the analysis of the Shewanella oneidensis proteome. SEC-RPLC-FTICR-MS allowed the detection of 297 proteins, as opposed to 166 using RPLC-CIEF-FTICR-MS, indicating that approaches based on LC-MS provide better coverage. However, there were significant differences in the sets of proteins detected and both approaches provide a basis for accurately quantifying changes in protein and modified protein abundances.
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