Protease cleavage site fingerprinting by label-free in-gel degradomics reveals pH-dependent specificity switch of legumain

Determination of protease specificity is of crucial importance for understanding protease function. We have developed the first gel-based label-free proteomic approach (DIPPS—direct in-gel profiling of protease specificity) that enables quick and reliable determination of protease cleavage specificities under large variety of experimental conditions. The methodology is based on in-gel digestion of the gel-separated proteome with the studied protease, enrichment of cleaved peptides by gel extraction, and subsequent mass spectrometry analysis combined with a length-limited unspecific database search. We applied the methodology to profile ten proteases ranging from highly specific (trypsin, endoproteinase GluC, caspase-7, and legumain) to broadly specific (matrix-metalloproteinase-3, thermolysin, and cathepsins K, L, S, and V). Using DIPPS, we were able to perform specificity profiling of thermolysin at its optimal temperature of 75°C, which confirmed the applicability of the method to extreme experimental conditions. Moreover, DIPPS enabled the first global specificity profiling of legumain at pH as low as 4.0, which revealed a pH-dependent change in the specificity of this protease, further supporting its broad applicability.
Source: EMBO Journal - Category: Molecular Biology Authors: Tags: Chemical Biology, Methods & Resources, Post-translational Modifications, Proteolysis & Proteomics Source Type: research