Method for Screening and MALDI-TOF MS Sequencing of Encoded Combinatorial Libraries
- 23 August 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 79 (19) , 7275-7285
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac070418g
Abstract
We describe a new method for encoded synthesis, efficient on-resin screening, and rapid unambiguous sequencing of combinatorial peptide libraries. An improved binary tag system for encoding peptide libraries during synthesis was designed to facilitate unequivocal assignment of isobaric residues by MALDI-TOF MS analysis. The improved method for encoded library synthesis was combined with a new versatile on-resin screening strategy that permitted multiple stages and types of screening to be employed successively on one library under mild conditions. The new method facilitated a combinatorial study of transglutaminase (TGase) enzyme substrate peptides, revealing new details of the effect of amino acid composition on TGase substrates. The approach was first demonstrated for an encoded library (130 321 compounds) of lysine pentapeptide substrates of TGase, synthesized using the “split−mix” method. The library was reacted on-resin with TGase enzyme and a soluble desthiobiotin labeled glutamine substrate. Initial screening was performed by adsorbing streptavidin-coated magnetic microparticles onto library beads, followed by magnetic separation. The differential binding affinities of desthiobiotin and biotin for streptavidin were exploited to release the magnetic microparticles and regenerate the desthiobiotin-labeled resin beads for further screening by flow-cytometry-based automated bead sorting, resulting in 345 beads that were sequenced by MALDI-TOF MS analysis. A second library consisted of encoded glutamine hexapeptide substrates, which was reacted on-resin with TGase enzyme and a soluble desthiobiotin-labeled cadaverine. Two-stage screening identified 267 glutamine peptides as TGase-reactive, of which 21 were further analyzed by solution-phase enzyme kinetics. Kinetic results indicated that the peptide PQQQYV from the library has a 68-fold greater substrate specificity than the best known glutamine substrate QQIV. The new encoding and screening strategies described here are expected to be broadly applicable to synthesis and screening of combinatorial peptide libraries in the future.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phage display selection of efficient glutamine‐donor substrate peptides for transglutaminase 2Protein Science, 2006
- Partial Alloc-Deprotection Approach for Ladder Synthesis of “One-Bead One-Compound” Combinatorial LibrariesJournal of Combinatorial Chemistry, 2005
- Applications of magnetic nanoparticles in biomedicineJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 2003
- Isolation of antigen‐specific B cellsImmunology & Cell Biology, 2003
- Transglutaminases: crosslinking enzymes with pleiotropic functionsNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2003
- Synthesis and Characterization of Enzymatically-Cross-Linked Poly(ethylene glycol) HydrogelsMacromolecules, 1997
- Identification of the α Chain Lysine Donor Sites Involved in Factor XIIIa Fibrin Cross-linkingJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Two Adjacent N-terminal Glutamines of BM-40 (Osteonectin, SPARC) Act as Amine Acceptor Sites in TransglutaminaseC-catalyzed ModificationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1995
- The amine‐donor substrate specificity of tissue‐type transglutaminaseEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1994
- Enzymic basis for the Ca2+ion-induced crosslinking of membrane proteins in intact human erythrocytesBiochemistry, 1978