Issue 14, 2017

Limited proteolysis in porous membrane reactors containing immobilized trypsin

Abstract

Proteolysis is often a critical step in protein characterization via mass spectrometry. Compared to complete digestion, limited proteolysis gives larger peptides, and the dominant cleavage sites may identify highly accessible, flexible protein regions. This paper explores controlled proteolysis in porous nylon membranes containing immobilized trypsin. Passage of protein solutions through ∼100 μm thick membranes provides reaction residence times as short as milliseconds to limit digestion. Additionally, variation of the membrane pore size and the protease-immobilization method (electrostatic adsorption or covalent anchoring to adsorbed polymer in membrane pores) affords control over the proteolysis rate. When digesting the highly labile protein β-casein, large membrane pores (5.0 μm) and covalent enzyme anchoring to adsorbed polymer lead to particularly long tryptic peptides. With the more trypsin-resistant proteins cytochrome c and apomyoglobin, in-membrane proteolysis with short residence times, 1.2 μm membrane pores, and trypsin electrostatically immobilized to an adsorbed polyanion cleaves the proteins after lysine residues in flexible regions. For both cytochrome c and apomyoglobin, cleavages in an interhelix region yield two particularly large peptides that cover the entire protein sequence.

Graphical abstract: Limited proteolysis in porous membrane reactors containing immobilized trypsin

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2017
Accepted
02 Jun 2017
First published
02 Jun 2017

Analyst, 2017,142, 2578-2586

Limited proteolysis in porous membrane reactors containing immobilized trypsin

J. Dong, W. Ning, W. Liu and M. L. Bruening, Analyst, 2017, 142, 2578 DOI: 10.1039/C7AN00778G

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