Discovery of Electrophiles and Profiling of Enzyme Cofactors.

Curr Protoc Chem Biol

Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Published: December 2020

Reverse-polarity activity-based protein profiling (RP-ABPP) is a chemical proteomics approach that uses nucleophilic probes amenable to "click" chemistry deployed into living cells in culture to capture, immunoprecipitate, and identify protein-bound electrophiles. RP-ABPP is used to characterize the structure and function of reactive electrophilic post-translational modifications (PTMs) and the proteins harboring them, which may uncover unknown or novel functions. RP-ABPP has demonstrated utility as a versatile method to monitor the metabolic regulation of electrophilic cofactors, using a pyruvoyl cofactor in S-adenosyl-L-methionine decarboxylase (AMD1), and to discover novel types of electrophilic modifications on proteins in human cells, such as the glyoxylyl modification on secernin-3 (SCRN3). These cofactors cannot be predicted by sequence, and therefore this area is relatively undeveloped. RP-ABPP is the only global, unbiased approach to discover such electrophiles. Here, we describe the utility of these experiments and provide a detailed protocol for de novo discovery, quantitation, and global profiling of electrophilic functionality of proteins. © 2020 The Authors. Basic Protocol 1: Identification and quantification of probe-reactive proteins Basic Protocol 2: Characterization of the site of probe labeling Basic Protocol 3: Determination and quantitation of electrophile structure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9285064PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpch.86DOI Listing

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