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Nature Research, Nature Protocols, 1(6), p. 111-120, 2011

DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2010.178

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Characterization of the prime and non-prime active site specificities of proteases by proteome-derived peptide libraries and tandem mass spectrometry

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

To link cleaved substrates in complex systems with a specific protease, the protease active site specificity is required. Proteomic identification of cleavage sites (PICS) simultaneously determines both the prime- and non-prime-side specificities of individual proteases through identification of hundreds of individual cleavage sequences from biologically relevant, proteome-derived peptide libraries. PICS also identifies subsite cooperativity. To generate PICS peptide libraries, cellular proteomes are digested with a specific protease such as trypsin. Following protease inactivation, primary amines are protected. After incubation with a test protease, each prime-side cleavage fragment has a free newly formed N-terminus, which is biotinylated for affinity isolation and identification by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The corresponding non-prime sequences are derived bioinformatically. The step-by-step protocol also presents a web service for PICS data analysis, as well as introducing and validating PICS peptide libraries made from Escherichia coli.