Abstract

Studies of protein dynamics, structure and interactions using hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) have sharply increased over the past 5-10 years. The predominant technology requires fast digestion at pH 2-3 to retain deuterium label. Pepsin is used almost exclusively, but it provides relatively low efficiency under the constraints of the experiment, and a selectivity profile that renders poor coverage of intrinsically disordered regions. In this study we present nepenthesin-containing secretions of the pitcher plant Nepenthes, commonly called monkey cups, for use in HDX-MS. We show that nepenthesin is at least 1400-fold more efficient than pepsin under HDX-competent conditions, with a selectivity profile that mimics pepsin in part, but also includes efficient cleavage C-terminal to "forbidden" residues K, R, H, and P. High efficiency permits a solution-based analysis with no detectable autolysis, avoiding the complication of immobilized enzyme reactors. Relaxed selectivity promotes high coverage of disordered regions and the ability to "tune" the mass map for regions of interest. Nepenthesin-enriched secretions were applied to an analysis of protein complexes in the nonhomologous end-joining DNA repair pathway. The analysis of XRCC4 binding to the BRCT domains of Ligase IV points to secondary interactions between the disordered C-terminal tail of XRCC4 and remote regions of the BRCT domains, which could only be identified with a nepenthesin-based workflow. HDX data suggest that stalk-binding to XRCC4 primes a BRCT conformation in these remote regions to support tail interaction, an event which may be phosphoregulated. We conclude that nepenthesin is an effective alternative to pepsin for all HDX-MS applications, and especially for the analysis of structural transitions among intrinsically disordered proteins and their binding partners.

Highlights

  • Mass spectrometry has served the biochemical and biological communities by providing the capacity for protein identi

  • A low complexity and protein content of the activated fluid was observed by SDS-PAGE, with the presence of nepenthesin confirmed by LC-mass spectrometry (MS)/MS

  • To explore the utility of nepenthesin in hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS), we applied it to an analysis of Ligase IV interactions with XRCC4, a scaffolding protein in a DNA damage repair complex of the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway

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Summary

Introduction

Mass spectrometry has served the biochemical and biological communities by providing the capacity for protein identi-. Most methods involve either enzyme microreactors presenting high concentrations of pepsin in a flow-through system [15], or solution-phase digestions using pepsin and protease XIII in separate experiments [16, 17]. Nepenthesin displays remarkably high cleavage efficiency for a broad range of substrates at low pH and temperature, which promotes high sequence coverage for a collection of proteins selected from ongoing HDX projects in our laboratories.

Results
Conclusion

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