TY - JOUR
T1 - RPTMDetermine
T2 - A Fully Automated Methodology for Endogenous Tyrosine Nitration Validation, Site-Localization, and beyond
AU - Dong, Naiping
AU - Spencer, Daniel M.
AU - Quan, Quan
AU - Le Blanc, J. C.Yves
AU - Feng, Jinwen
AU - Li, Mengzhu
AU - Siu, K. W.Michael
AU - Chu, Ivan K.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Hong Kong Research Grants Council (Project Nos. HKU 17318616, 17305117, and 17304919) and the University of Hong Kong for financial support. We thank Dr. Leong Ting Lui for helpful discussions.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/8/4
Y1 - 2020/8/4
N2 - We present herein rPTMDetermine, an adaptive and fully automated methodology for validation of the identification of rarely occurring post-translational modifications (PTMs), using a semisupervised approach with a linear discriminant analysis (LDA) algorithm. With this strategy, verification is enhanced through similarity scoring of tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) comparisons between modified peptides and their unmodified analogues. We applied rPTMDetermine to (1) perform fully automated validation steps for modified peptides identified from an in silico database and (2) retrieve potential yet-to-be-identified modified peptides from raw data (that had been missed through conventional database searches). In part (1), 99 of 125 3-nitrotyrosyl-containing (nitrated) peptides obtained from a ProteinPilot search were validated and localized. Twenty nitrated peptides were falsely assigned because of incorrect monoisotopic peak assignments, leading to erroneous identification of deamidation and nitration. Five additional nitrated peptides were, however, validated after performing nonmonoisotopic peak correction. In part (2), an additional 236 unique nitrated peptides were retrieved and localized, containing 113 previously unreported nitration sites; 25 endogenous nitrated peptides with novel sites were selected and verified by comparison with synthetic analogues. In summary, we identified and confidently validated 296 unique nitrated peptides-collectively representing the largest number of endogenously identified 3-nitrotyrosyl-containing peptides from the cerebral cortex proteome of a Macaca fascicularis model of stroke. Furthermore, we harnessed the rPTMDetermine strategy to complement conventional database searching and enhance the confidence of assigning rarely occurring PTMs, while recovering many missed peptides. In a final demonstration, we successfully extended the application of rPTMDetermine to peptides featuring tryptophan oxidation.
AB - We present herein rPTMDetermine, an adaptive and fully automated methodology for validation of the identification of rarely occurring post-translational modifications (PTMs), using a semisupervised approach with a linear discriminant analysis (LDA) algorithm. With this strategy, verification is enhanced through similarity scoring of tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) comparisons between modified peptides and their unmodified analogues. We applied rPTMDetermine to (1) perform fully automated validation steps for modified peptides identified from an in silico database and (2) retrieve potential yet-to-be-identified modified peptides from raw data (that had been missed through conventional database searches). In part (1), 99 of 125 3-nitrotyrosyl-containing (nitrated) peptides obtained from a ProteinPilot search were validated and localized. Twenty nitrated peptides were falsely assigned because of incorrect monoisotopic peak assignments, leading to erroneous identification of deamidation and nitration. Five additional nitrated peptides were, however, validated after performing nonmonoisotopic peak correction. In part (2), an additional 236 unique nitrated peptides were retrieved and localized, containing 113 previously unreported nitration sites; 25 endogenous nitrated peptides with novel sites were selected and verified by comparison with synthetic analogues. In summary, we identified and confidently validated 296 unique nitrated peptides-collectively representing the largest number of endogenously identified 3-nitrotyrosyl-containing peptides from the cerebral cortex proteome of a Macaca fascicularis model of stroke. Furthermore, we harnessed the rPTMDetermine strategy to complement conventional database searching and enhance the confidence of assigning rarely occurring PTMs, while recovering many missed peptides. In a final demonstration, we successfully extended the application of rPTMDetermine to peptides featuring tryptophan oxidation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85090823954&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c02148
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c02148
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85090823954
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 92
SP - 10768
EP - 10776
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 15
ER -