Abstract
The eukaryotic RNA polymerase II (Pol II) multi-protein complex transcribes mRNA and coordinates several steps of co-transcriptional mRNA processing and chromatin modification. The largest Pol II subunit, Rpb1, has a C-terminal domain (CTD) comprising dozens of repeated heptad sequences (Tyr1-Ser2-Pro3-Thr4-Ser5-Pro6-Ser7), each containing five phospho-accepting amino acids. The CTD heptads are dynamically phosphorylated, creating specific patterns correlated with steps of transcription initiation, elongation, and termination. This CTD phosphorylation 'code' choreographs dynamic recruitment of important co-regulatory proteins during gene transcription. Genetic tools were used to engineer protease cleavage sites across the CTD (msCTD), creating tryptic peptides with unique sequences amenable to mass spectrometry analysis. However, phosphorylation isoforms within each msCTD sequence are difficult to resolve by standard reversed phase chromatography typically used for LC-MS/MS applications. Here, we use a panel of synthetic CTD phosphopeptides to explore the potential of hydrophilic interaction and electrostatic repulsion hydrophilic interaction (HILIC and ERLIC) chromatography as alternatives to reversed phase separation for CTD phosphopeptide analysis. Our results demonstrate that ERLIC provides improved performance for separation of singly- and doubly-phosphorylated CTD peptides for sequence analysis by LC-MS/MS. Analysis of native yeast msCTD confirms that phosphorylation on Ser5 and Ser2 represents the major endogenous phosphoisoforms. We expect this methodology will be especially useful in the investigation of pathways where multiple protein phosphorylation events converge in close proximity.
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