Publication | Open Access
Bio-orthogonal Affinity Purification of Direct Kinase Substrates
100
Citations
22
References
2005
Year
Individual Protein KinaseProtein FunctionSignal TransductionBiochemistryDirect Kinase SubstratesNatural SciencesMedicineReceptor Tyrosine KinaseSignal RecognitionMolecular BiologyProtein KinaseProtein EngineeringBiomolecular InteractionCellular BiochemistryChemical BiologyProteomicsProtein PhosphorylationBiomolecular Engineering
Protein phosphorylation is a major mechanism of post-translational protein modification used to control cellular signaling. A challenge in phosphoproteomics is to identify the direct substrates of each protein kinase. Herein, we describe a chemical strategy for delivery of a bio-orthogonal affinity tag to the substrates of an individual protein kinase. The kinase of interest is engineered to transfer a phosphorothioate moiety to phosphoacceptor hydroxyl groups on direct substrates. In a second nonenzymatic step, the introduced phosphorothioate is alkylated with p-nitrobenzylmesylate (PNBM). Antibodies directed against the alkylated phosphorothioate epitope recognize these labeled substrates, but not alkylation products of other cellular nucleophiles. This strategy is demonstrated with Cdk1/cyclinB substrates using ELISA, western blotting, and immunoprecipitation in the context of whole cell lysates.
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