Abstract

BackgroundMiddle-down mass spectrometry (MS), i.e., analysis of long (~50–60 aa) polypeptides, has become the method with the highest throughput and accuracy for the characterization of combinatorial histone posttranslational modifications (PTMs). The discovery of histone readers with multiple domains, and overall the cross talk of PTMs that decorate histone proteins, has revealed that histone marks have synergistic roles in modulating enzyme recruitment and subsequent chromatin activities. Here, we demonstrate that the middle-down MS strategy can be combined with metabolic labeling for enhanced quantification of histone proteins and their combinatorial PTMs in a dynamic manner.MethodsWe used a nanoHPLC-MS/MS system consisting of hybrid weak cation exchange–hydrophilic interaction chromatography combined with high resolution MS and MS/MS with ETD fragmentation. After spectra identification, we filtered confident hits and quantified polypeptides using our in-house software isoScale.ResultsWe first verified that middle-down MS can discriminate and differentially quantify unlabeled from heavy labeled histone N-terminal tails (heavy lysine and arginine residues). Results revealed no bias toward identifying and quantifying unlabeled versus heavy labeled tails, even if the heavy labeled peptides presented the typical skewed isotopic pattern typical of long protein sequences that hardly get 100% labeling. Next, we plated epithelial cells into a media with heavy methionine-(methyl-13CD3), the precursor of the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine and stimulated epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). We assessed that results were reproducible across biological replicates and with data obtained using the more widely adopted bottom-up MS strategy, i.e., analysis of short tryptic peptides. We found remarkable differences in the incorporation rate of methylations in non-confluent cells versus confluent cells. Moreover, we showed that H3K27me3 was a critical player during the EMT process, as a consistent portion of histones modified as H3K27me2K36me2 in epithelial cells were converted into H3K27me3K36me2 in mesenchymal cells.ConclusionsWe demonstrate that middle-down MS, despite being a more scarcely exploited MS technique than bottom-up, is a robust quantitative method for histone PTM characterization. In particular, middle-down MS combined with metabolic labeling is currently the only methodology available for investigating turnover of combinatorial histone PTMs in dynamic systems.

Highlights

  • Middle-down mass spectrometry (MS), i.e., analysis of long (~50–60 aa) polypeptides, has become the method with the highest throughput and accuracy for the characterization of combinatorial histone posttranslational modifications (PTMs)

  • In this work, we evaluated the feasibility of middle-down MS proteomics to characterize the dynamics of histone PTMs upon metabolic labeling

  • Stable isotope labeling in cell culture (SILAC) is a routine quantitative strategy in proteomics [39]; by differentially labeling the protein amino acid sequence it is possible to discriminate samples mixed in the early stage of the preparation

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Summary

Introduction

Middle-down mass spectrometry (MS), i.e., analysis of long (~50–60 aa) polypeptides, has become the method with the highest throughput and accuracy for the characterization of combinatorial histone posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Another example is that H3K4ac inhibits the binding of the protein spChp to H3K9me2/me in S. pombe [9] Overall, these examples highlight the highly synergistic role of combinatorial PTMs and emphasize the need to quantify the total PTM content of a single histone tail. Bernstein and co-workers published a genomics approach to looking at combinatorial PTMs; the approach performs high-throughput single-molecule imaging and it can cope with multiple histone PTMs [19] Overall, even though these methods have proved very successful in dedicated applications, they have all the limitations associated with the use of antibodies, including the fact that binding can be affected by nearby PTMs, which occurs frequently for hypermodified proteins such as histones

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