A chemical approach for detecting sulfenic acid-modified proteins in living cells.

Mol Biosyst

Life Sciences Institute, University of Michigan, 210 Washtenaw Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2216, USA.

Published: June 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • * A new probe, DAz-1, has been developed that selectively labels sulfenic acid-modified proteins in live cells, making it easier to study these modifications in a physiological context.
  • * DAz-1 combines chemical selectivity and cell permeability with an azide handle for identification, allowing researchers to enrich and visualize sulfenic acid-modified proteins through biochemical techniques like mass spectrometry and immunoblotting.

Article Abstract

Oxidation of the thiol functional group in cysteine (Cys-SH) to sulfenic (Cys-SOH), sulfinic (Cys-SO2H) and sulfonic acids (Cys-SO3H) is emerging as an important post-translational modification that can activate or deactivate the function of many proteins. Changes in thiol oxidation state have been implicated in a wide variety of cellular processes and correlate with disease states but are difficult to monitor in a physiological setting because of a lack of experimental tools. Here, we describe a method that enables live cell labeling of sulfenic acid-modified proteins. For this approach, we have synthesized the probe DAz-1, which is chemically selective for sulfenic acids and cell permeable. In addition, DAz-1 contains an azide chemical handle that can be selectively detected with phosphine reagents via the Staudinger ligation for identification, enrichment and visualization of modified proteins. Through a combination of biochemical, mass spectrometry and immunoblot approaches we characterize the reactivity of DAz-1 and highlight its utility for detecting protein sulfenic acids directly in mammalian cells. This novel method to isolate and identify sulfenic acid-modified proteins should be of widespread utility for elucidating signaling pathways and regulatory mechanisms that involve oxidation of cysteine residues.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3529510PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/b719986dDOI Listing

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Oxidation of cysteine to sulfenic acid has emerged as a biologically relevant post-translational modification with particular importance in redox-mediated signal transduction; however, the identity of modified proteins remains largely unknown. We recently reported DAz-1, a cell-permeable chemical probe capable of detecting sulfenic acid modified proteins directly in living cells. Here we describe DAz-2, an analogue of DAz-1 that exhibits significantly improved potency in vitro and in cells.

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Article Synopsis
  • * A new probe, DAz-1, has been developed that selectively labels sulfenic acid-modified proteins in live cells, making it easier to study these modifications in a physiological context.
  • * DAz-1 combines chemical selectivity and cell permeability with an azide handle for identification, allowing researchers to enrich and visualize sulfenic acid-modified proteins through biochemical techniques like mass spectrometry and immunoblotting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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