Abstract

Protein persulfidation is one of the most important oxidative translational modifications and plays vital roles in various important biological processes. However, the proteome-wide identification of persulfidation sites is a great challenge because of the difficulties in accurately differentiating persulfide groups with disulfide and thiol groups in proteins as well as the extremely low abundance of persulfidated peptides. By current approaches, the persulfidated peptides were often identified by the cleavage of their persulfide groups by reductants prior to MS analysis; therefore, it would bring about a false positive identification and was unable to identify persulfidation sites accurately for a single peptide with multiple cysteine residues. In this study, a novel strategy for the site-specific quantification of persulfidome (SSQPer) was developed. By this strategy, the persulfidated proteins were first labeled with cleavable isotope-coded affinity tag (c-ICAT) reagents. After digestion, the labeled persulfidated peptides were selectively enriched with streptavidin beads and fractionated by strong cation exchange chromatography, followed by LC-MS/MS identification. To evaluate the performance of SSQPer, the persulfidated BSA digests with 20 persulfidation sites identified were used to spike HeLa cell digests with mass ratios of 1:100 and 1:1000, and 16 and 13 persulfidated sites were respectively identified. We applied SSQPer to the site-specific quantification of persulfidome in the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) process, and 226 endogenous persulfidation sites were identified, of which 74.3% were newly discovered. All of these results demonstrated that the SSQPer strategy would provide a promising tool to profile the site-specific persulfidome and pave the way for future investigation to expand our knowledge of persulfidation.

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