Abstract

The FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase plays an important role in normal hematopoietic development and leukemogenesis. Point mutations within the activation loop and in-frame tandem duplications of the juxtamembrane domain represent the most frequent molecular abnormalities observed in acute myeloid leukemia. Interestingly these gain-of-function mutations correlate with different clinical outcomes, suggesting that signals from constitutive FLT3 mutants activate different downstream targets. In principle, mass spectrometry offers a powerful means to quantify protein phosphorylation and identify signaling events associated with constitutively active kinases or other oncogenic events. However, regulation of individual phosphorylation sites presents a challenging case for proteomics studies whereby quantification is based on individual peptides rather than an average across different peptides derived from the same protein. Here we describe a robust experimental framework and associated error model for iTRAQ-based quantification on an Orbitrap mass spectrometer that relates variance of peptide ratios to mass spectral peak height and provides for assignment of p value, q value, and confidence interval to every peptide identification, all based on routine measurements, obviating the need for detailed characterization of individual ion peaks. Moreover, we demonstrate that our model is stable over time and can be applied in a manner directly analogous to ubiquitously used external mass calibration routines. Application of our error model to quantitative proteomics data for FLT3 signaling provides evidence that phosphorylation of tyrosine phosphatase SHP1 abrogates the transformative potential, but not overall kinase activity, of FLT3-D835Y in acute myeloid leukemia.

Highlights

  • The FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase plays an important role in normal hematopoietic development and leukemogenesis

  • STAT5a Is Differentially Activated by FLT3-Internal tandem duplication (ITD) and -D835Y—To understand the effect of either ITD or D835Y mutation on the complex signaling network that exists under normal physiological conditions, we plotted ratios for tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides derived from wild type (WT) ϩ FL, D835Y, and ITD, each normalized to the corresponding phosphopeptide derived from cells with unstimulated, WT kinase (Fig. 3b)

  • We demonstrated that a combination of linear ion trap CAD with higher energy HCD fragmentation offered an effective means to analyze iTRAQ-labeled peptides on an Orbitrap XL instrument

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Summary

Introduction

The FLT3 receptor tyrosine kinase plays an important role in normal hematopoietic development and leukemogenesis. We developed an error model that relates the variance of measured ratios to observed reporter ion intensity and provides a p value, q value, and confidence interval for every peptide identified.

Results
Conclusion
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