A novel two-dimensional liquid-phase separation method was developed that is capable of resolving large numbers of cellular proteins. The proteins are separated by pI using isoelectric focusing in the first dimension and by hydrophobicity using nonporous reversed-phase HPLC in the second dimension (IEF-NP RP HPLC). Proteins were mapped using original software in order to create a protein pattern analogous to that of the 2-D PAGE image. RP HPLC peaks are represented by bands of different intensity in the 2-D image, according to the intensity of the peaks eluting from the HPLC. Each peak was collected as the eluent of the HPLC separation in the liquid phase. The proteins collected were identified using proteolytic enzymes, MALDI-TOF MS and MSFit database searching. Using IEF-NP RP HPLC, approximately 700 bands were resolved in a pI range from 3.2 to 9.5 and 38 different proteins with molecular weights ranging from 12,000 to 75,000 were identified. In comparison to a 2-D gel separation of the same human erythroleukemia cell line lysate, the IEF-NP RP HPLC produced improved resolution of low mass and basic proteins. In addition, the proteins remained in the liquid phase throughout the separation, thus making the entire procedure highly amenable to automation and high throughput. It is demonstrated that IEF-NP RP HPLC provides a viable alternative to the 2-D gel separation method for the screening of protein profiles.
A liquid-phase three-dimensional protein separation method has been developed that is used to separate the cytosolic fraction of a HEL cell lysate via isoelectric focusing (IEF), nonporous silica (NPS) reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) and electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ESI-TOFMS), respectively. Several hundred unique protein molecular weights were observed in a pI range from 4.8 to 8.5 and a mass range from 5 to 85 kDa. Proteins were positively identified by analysis of the pI (+/-0.5 pI units), an intact protein molecular weight (+/-150 ppm), and peptide mass mapping results. Using the molecular weight (MW) and peptide mapping results of identified proteins it was possible to characterize their posttranslational (PTMs) and/or sequence modifications. PTMs were detected on both forms of cytosolic actin, heat shock 90 beta, HINT and alpha-enolase. Sequence modifications or conflicts were observed for beta-and gamma-actin, ATP beta-synthase and heat shock 90 beta. IEF-NPS-RP-HPLC/ESI-TOFMS was used to determine experimental pI, MW and relative hydrophobicity values for each protein detected. This data was used to generate a 2-D pI-MS protein map, where proteins are displayed according to their pI and molecular weight. Protein molecular weight peaks are represented as bands in the 2-D pI-MS image where the gray scale of each band is proportional to the intensity of the protein molecular weight peak. In addition, a third hydrophobicity dimension (%B) was added as the % acetonitrile elution to generate a 3-D pI-MS-%B plot where each protein can be tagged according to three parameters.
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