Abstract

Phosphorylation is one of the most common posttranslational modifications of proteins in eukaryotic cells; it plays an important role in a wide spectrum of biological processes. This makes its study an important task for understanding cell functioning mechanisms. The aim of phosphoproteomics is a global mass spectral analysis of the phosphoprotein composition of cells, i.e., phosphoproteome. Nowadays, new effective methods are actively developed, which succeed not only in the detection of phosphorylated proteins but also in the determination of phosphorylated amino acid residues (phosphorylation sites) and in the quantitative comparison of phosphorylation among several specimens. Despite the analysis of protein phosphorylation remains a complicated problem, the available methods nowadays allow the detection of thousands of phosphorylation sites in the very same experiment. The present review covers the main methods utilized in contemporary phosphoproteomics: phosphoprotein and phosphopeptides enrichment as well as the mass spectrometric analysis of protein phosphorylation.

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