Abstract

Arginine methylation is a common protein post-translational modification (PTM) that plays a key role in eukaryotic cells. Three distinct types of this modification are found in mammals: asymmetric Nη1Nη1-dimethylarginine (aDMA), symmetric Nη1Nη2-dimethylarginine (sDMA), and an intermediate Nη1-monomethylarginine (MMA). Elucidation of regulatory mechanisms of arginine methylation in living organisms requires precise information on both the type of the modified residues and their location inside the protein amino acid sequences. Despite mass spectrometry (MS) being the method of choice for analysis of multiple protein PTMs, unambiguous characterization of protein arginine methylation may not be always straightforward. Indeed, frequent internal basic residues of Arg methylated tryptic peptides hamper their sequencing under positive ion mode collision-induced dissociation (CID), the standardly used tandem mass spectrometry method, while the relative stability of the aDMA and sDMA side chains under alternative non-ergodic electron-based fragmentation techniques, electron-capture and electron transfer dissociations (ECD and ETD), may impede differentiation between the isobaric residues. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate the potential of the negative ion mode collision-induced dissociation MS for analysis of protein arginine methylation and present data revealing that the negative polarity approach can deliver both an unambiguous identification of the arginine methylation type and extensive information on the modified peptide sequences.

Highlights

  • Protein arginine methylation is a widespread posttranslational modification (PTM) that is implicated in a variety of central cellular processes, such as transcription, signal transduction, DNA repair, and apoptosis [1]

  • Our results reveal for the first time that negative ion mode collision-induced dissociation is a powerful tool for analysis of Nη-methylated arginine residues of peptides and proteins

  • We demonstrate that negative ion mode collision-induced dissociation (CID) can be used for both detection and pinpointing of the modified amino acids

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Summary

Introduction

Protein arginine methylation is a widespread posttranslational modification (PTM) that is implicated in a variety of central cellular processes, such as transcription, signal transduction, DNA repair, and apoptosis [1]. The formation efficiency of the positive ion mode Arg methylation marker ions has been found to be dependent on multiple factors, such as specific amino acid sequence, number of modified residues within analyzed peptide, peptide charge state, instrumentation type [30, 31, 33], which may cause uncertainty in the practical use of the PTM-specific fragments for the MS analysis.

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