Proteomics
Proteomics
Proteomics
Amino Acids
Amino Acids
Proteomics
Proteome
• The proteome is the
entire set of proteins
expressed by a genome,
cell, tissue or organism
at a certain time.
• More specifically, it is
the set of expressed
proteins in a given type
of cell or organism, at a
given time, under
defined conditions.
Complexity of the Proteome
• Within an individual organism, the
genome is constant, but the proteome
varies and is dynamic.
• Every cell in an individual organism has
the same set of genes, but the set of
proteins produced in different tissues
differ from one another and are
dependent on gene expression.
• One gene may express multiple proteins,
with multiple biological functions.
• They also may present in different forms
called isoforms.
Complexity of the Proteome
Post transitional modifications:
• Many proteins are modified after translation, and it is termed as Post
transitional modification or PTM.
• They modify via processes such as phosphorylation, glycosylation, and
ubiquitination and also proteolytic cleavage.
• Ubiquitylation is one of the most prevalent PTMs and controls almost
all types of cellular events in eukaryotes.
• Phosphorylation (adding of phosphates) or dephosphorylation
(removing of phosphates) is prominent in biochemical pathways.
Complexity of the Proteome
Post transitional modifications:
• Glycosylation is the attachment of sugar molecules (oligosaccharides)
to proteins. Glycosylation affects protein folding, stability, solubility,
and cellular recognition processes. It plays a critical role in cell-cell
interactions, immune responses, and protein trafficking.
• Proteolytic cleavage is a crucial post-translational modification that
can regulate protein activity, localization, stability, and function. It is
carried out by enzymes called proteases or peptidases.
Importance of understanding the Proteome
• Uncover how proteins interact with each other, participate in
signaling pathways and regulate gene expression.
• Discovery of new therapeutic targets and development of diagnostic
biomarkers.
• Design drugs to modulate the activity of target protein.
• Enable personalized medicine approaches, where treatment
strategies are tailored to an individual's specific proteomic profile.
Proteomics
• The study of the proteome is
called proteomics, and it
involves understanding how
proteins function and interact
with one another.
• The word proteome is a
combination of protein and
genome was coined by Marc
Wilkins in 1994.
• Proteome can be studied
using a variety of techniques.
Proteomics
Importance of Proteomics in Protein analysis:
• DNAsequences do not show how proteins function or how biological
processes occur.
• Proteomics facilitates the study of, splice variants, Post transcriptional
modifications (PTMs), Phospho-proteomics and 3D structures affect
protein function.
Protein Analysis Techniques
• Solubility methods
• Filtration
• Centrifugation
• Chromatographic methods
• Electrophoretic methods
• Western Blotting
• X-ray Crystallography
• NMR analysis
• Mass Spectrometry
Steps of Integrated Protein Analysis
• Sample purification
• Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
• High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)
• Mass Spectrometry (MS)
• Identification, Characterization Quantification of proteins
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
1D-SDS-PAGE:
• Proteins are separated based on molecular mass over a range of 10 -
300 kDa.
• Samples are weighed and dissolved in Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate (SDS).
• SDS is a negatively charged detergent that bind to proteins with its
hydrophobic region and binds water in its hydrophilic region.
• This SDS- protein-water interaction allows water insoluble proteins to
dissolve in water.
• The proteins are completely denatured by the SDS (with heating).
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
1D-SDS-PAGE:
• When an electric field is applied, the negative charge of the SDS
causes the proteins to move through a clear acrylamide matrix
toward the positive electrode.
• This matrix has holes that sieve out the proteins by molecular weight.
• Large proteins move more slowly through the matrix than the smaller
proteins thereby separating proteins by molecular weight.
• Molecular weight standards are included on each gel to allow for
determination of protein size.
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
1D-SDS-PAGE: 2D-SDS-PAGE:
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
2D-SDS-PAGE:
• The first-dimension separation by isoelectric focusing.
• The gel matrix has an immobilized pH gradient.
• Electric current causes charged proteins to move until it reaches the
isoelectric point.
• Then second-dimension separation by mass.
• The pH gel strip is loaded onto SDS gel.
• Have more resolving power than 1D-SDS-PAGE.
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
• Once protein bands have been separated, they can be visualized using
different methods of in-gel detection.
• The most used staining dye for proteins is Coomassie-Brilliant Blue.
• The major reason is CBB staining is simple, fast, and sensitive.
• Silver staining also is used to detect proteins after electrophoretic
separation on polyacrylamide gels.
• It combines excellent sensitivity in the low nano gram range.
• Depending on the chemistry of the stain, various steps are necessary
to fix the color to the proteins in the gel matrix .
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
1D-SDS-PAGE Gel Staining:
• Proteins appears as
bands. Each band may
contain 10-20 proteins
depending on the
material.
Poly Acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
2D-SDS-PAGE Gel Staining:
• Proteins appears as spots.
• Each spot usually contains
one protein.
Proteolytic Cleavage by Trypsin
• Trypsin is a serine protease that specifically cleaves peptide bonds on the
C-terminal side of basic amino acids, such as lysine (K) and arginine (R),
except when followed by proline (P).
• This involves incubating the protein with trypsin under controlled
conditions, typically at a specific temperature and pH.
• It cleave specifically large proteins to be become small peptides until the
range of the masses of the peptides are well suit to employ in PMF (500 Da
– 3500 Da)
• The resulting peptides will have a basic residue (K or R) at their C-terminus.
• Trypsin is widely used due to its specificity, reproducibility, and well-
characterized digestion properties.
Proteolytic Cleavage by Trypsin
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
Reversed Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatography (RP-HPLC):
• The type of HPLC most used in proteomics research is RP-HPLC.
• In RP-HPLC separation of peptides (after digestion of whole proteins
with trypsin) based on their hydrophobicity.
• Molecules that possess some degree of hydrophobic character, such
as proteins, peptides and nucleic acids, can be separated by RP-C with
excellent recovery and resolution.
• The hydrophilic peptides will be eluted off the column early in the
gradient, and hydrophobic peptides will be eluted toward the end of
the gradient.
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
Reversed Phase High Performance
Liquid Chromatography (RP-HPLC):
• Stationary phase column is packed
with silica particles that are
derivatized with hydrophobic alkyl
chains, usually C18, for peptide
analysis.
• Water soluble organic solvents such
as methanol, acetonitrile is used as
mobile phase.
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
Reversed Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatography (RP-HPLC):
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
Reversed Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatography (RP-HPLC):
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
Reversed Phase High Performance Liquid Chromatography (RP-HPLC):
• The retention time of a solute is taken as the elapsed time between
the time of injection of a solute and the time of elution of the peak
maximum of that solute.
• Conventionally, HPLC has used different types of detectors such as
Fluorescence detectors, UV spectrophotometers and electrochemical
detectors.
• Quite recently, HPLC has been coupled with MS in order to identify
the components in the mixture.
Mass Spectrometry (MS)
• Mass Spectrometer is a machine that weighs molecules.
• MS can also be used to quantify known materials, to identify
unknown compounds within a sample, to elucidate the structure and
chemical properties of different molecules.
• It consist of three major parts.
Mass Spectrometry (MS)
Principle of mass spectrometry:
• The complete process involves the conversion of the sample (in solid
or liquid phase) into gaseous ions, with or without fragmentation,
which are then characterized by their mass to charge ratios (m/z) and
relative abundances.
Ionization Techniques
Electron Impact (EI - Hard method):
• EI is done by volatilizing a sample directly in the source that is
contained in a vacuum system directly attached to the analyzer.
• Small molecules 1-1000 Daltons.
Fast Atom Bombardment (FAB – Semi-hard):
• FAB is a technique that was popular in the 80's to early 90's because
it was the first technique.
• A high energy beam of atoms or ions (Cs or Xe) vaporizes fragments
and ionizes peptides, sugars up to 6000 Daltons.
Ionization Techniques
Soft ionization techniques:
• Electrospray Ionization (ESI) – peptides,
proteins up to 200 kDa
• Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption (MALDI)
– peptides, proteins, DNA up to 500 kDa
• Soft ionization keeps the molecule of
interest fully intact. No fragmentation
occurs.
• Soft ionization methods use smaller
amounts of energy to ionize the sample.
Electrospray Ionization (ESI)
• ESI is the most popular ionization technique.
• The electrospray is created by putting a high voltage on a flow of liquid at
atmospheric pressure, sometimes assisted by a concurrent flow of gas.
• The created spray is directed to an opening in the ESI spray vacuum system,
where the droplets are de-solvated by a combination of heat, vacuum and
acceleration into gas by voltages.
• Eventually the ions are ejected from the droplets and accelerated into the
mass analyzer by voltages.
• For larger molecules, the ions may contain multiple charges, allowing the
detection of very large molecules on analyzers that have limited mass to
charge (m/Z) ratio ranges.
Electrospray Ionization (ESI)
Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption (MALDI)
Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption (MALDI)
Sample Preparation:
• The analyte is in an in volatile deposit.
• It is obtained by various preparation
methods which frequently involve the
introduction of a matrix e.g., 2,5-
Dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) that can
be either a solid or a viscous fluid.
• Matrix disperses large amounts of
energy absorbed by the laser and
minimizes fragmentation of the
molecule.
Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption (MALDI)
• This deposit is then irradiated by energetic particles or photons that
desorb ions near the solid surface of the deposit.
• Pulsed laser is used. It provides selective ionization by choosing
appropriate wavelength e.g., IR laser CO2 laser, UV laser, YAG etc.
• It is important that the ions produced in the ionization chamber have
a free run through the machine without connecting air molecules.
• MALDI generates spectra that have just a singly charged ions.
• These ions can be extracted by an electric field and focused towards
the analyzer.
Mass Analyzers
• Time of Flight Mass Analyzer (TOF)
• Quadrupole Mass Analyzer
• Magnetic Sector Mass Analyzer
• Electrostatic Sector Mass Analyzer
• Quadrupole Ion Trap Mass Analyzers
• Ion Cyclotron Resonance
Time of Flight Mass Analyzer (TOF)
Time of Flight Mass Analyzer (TOF)
• Pulses of ions are accelerated into the evacuated drift tube (free of field or
external force).
• Ions are separated in the drift tube according to their velocities.
• Velocity of an ion depends on m/z.
• Lighter ions move faster along the tube than heavier ions.
• If the particles all have the same charge, the kinetic energies will be
identical, and their velocities will depend only on their masses.
• TOF is the measured time they take to reach the detector.
Time of Flight Mass Analyzer (TOF)
• m = mass of ion
• v = velocity of ion
• z = charge of ion
• V = accelerating voltage
Mass Detectors
• Mass detectors measure the abundance of ions after they have been
separated by the mass analyzer.
• They convert ions into electrical signals that can be quantified.
• The detection process is typically based on the principle of ion-to-electron
conversion, where ions interact with a detector surface and release
electrons, generating an electric current.
• The output of the mass detector is a mass spectrum, which represents the
relative abundance of ions at different m/z values.
• Common types of mass detectors include electron multipliers,
photomultiplier tubes, microchannel plates, and semiconductor-based
detectors.
Mass Spectrum
Mass spectrum of single charged ions:
Mass Spectrum
Mass spectrum of multiple charged ions:
Mass Spectrum
• Monoisotopic mass
is the mass
determined using the
masses of the most
abundant isotopes.
• Average mass is the
abundance weighted
mass of all isotopic
components.
Mass Spectrum
Mass Resolution:
• Ability of a mass spectrometer
to distinguish between ions of
different m/z ratios.
• Width of peak indicates the
resolution of the MS
instrument.
• The better the resolution or
resolving power, the better the
instrument and the better the
mass accuracy.
Mass Spectrum
Mass Resolution:
• Resolving power is defined as R = m/ Δm
• m is the mass number of the observed mass.
• Δm is the difference between two masses that
can be separated.
• In that case Δm is the width of the peak at half of
the peak corresponding to m.
• Mass accuracy is the difference between
measured and actual mass.
Mass Spectrum
Bioinformatics
• Analyze and assemble the
MS data
• Study protein-protein
interactions
• Design interactive
pathways (interactome)
• Predict 3-D structures of
proteins
Proteins as Drugs Targets
• Most drug targets are proteins that are encoded by genes expressed
within tissues affected by a disease.
• It is estimated that there are approximately,
o 10,000 different enzymes
o 2,000 different G-protein-coupled receptors
o 200 different ion channels,
o 100 different nuclear hormone receptors encoded in the human genome.
• These proteins are key components of malignant transformation
pathways and, therefore, are likely to be a good source of new drug
targets.
Proteins as Drugs Targets
• At present, proteins represent more than 90% of druggable targets
and more novel targets are being identified.
• The main challenge of the drug discovery process is to develop the
right drug for the right target.
• The pattern of protein changes after drug application will give
information about the mechanism of action, either for therapeutic or
toxicological effects.
• Various drugs might be compared and grouped according to their
actions on signaling cascades or metabolic pathways.
• Side effects can also be described if additional proteins are involved.
Proteins as Drugs Targets