Characterization of CYP2B6 K262R allelic variants by quantitative allele-specific proteomics using a QconCAT standard

Publication date: Available online 3 October 2019Source: Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical AnalysisAuthor(s): Jill Barber, Matthew R. Russell, Amin Rostami-Hodjegan, Brahim AchourAbstractClinically-relevant proteins are routinely characterized by targeted proteomic methods, which offer high accuracy and reproducibility. However, assays developed for these techniques lack distinction between different alleles expressed in biological samples. The significance of assessing such variations in genes relevant to pharmacology will depend on their prevalence and effects on drug therapy. We propose quantitative allele-specific proteomics for simultaneous abundance measurement and determination of missense polymorphisms. We employed a targeted proteomic strategy using a QconCAT standard which included two surrogate peptides (at 1:1 ratio) for a prevalent variation of CYP2B6 (K262R) so that the two variants could be quantified directly. Measurement was carried out in 24 human liver samples, out of which 21 were genotyped. Allele-specific analysis of CYP2B6 expression was accurate and precise (CV < 9%), leading to determination of allele expression ratios (variant to wild type) for heterozygous (1.006 ± 0.079, n = 12) and homozygous (0.005 ± 0.004, n = 8) phenotypes. The abundance of CYP2B6 was 7.4 ± 7.8 pmol mg−1 microsomal protein and showed good correlation with activity (Rs = 0.91, p < 0.0001; R2 = 0.93). Comparable abundance ...
Source: Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research