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Chemical labelling of active serum thioester proteins for quantification

Chemical labelling of active serum thioester proteins for quantification
Chemical labelling of active serum thioester proteins for quantification
The complement serum proteins C3 and C4 and the protease inhibitor α-2 macroglobulin are all members of the C3/α-2M thioester protein family, an evolutionarily ancient and conserved family that contains an intrachain thioester bond. The chemistry of the thioester bond is a key to the function of the thioester proteins. All these proteins function by covalently linking to their target by acyl transfer of the protein via the thioester moiety. We show that the signature thioester bond can be targeted with nucleophiles linked to a bioreporter molecule, site-specifically modifying the whole, intact thioester protein. Conditions were optimised to label selectively and efficiently pull-down unprocessed thioester-containing proteins from serum. We demonstrated pull-down of full-length C3, α-2M and C4 from sera in high salt, using a biotinylated nucleophile and streptavidin-coated resin, confirmed by MALDI-TOF MS identification of the gel bands. The potential for the development of a quantitative method for measuring active C3 in serum was investigated in patient sera pre and post operation. Quantifying active C3 in clinical assays using current methods is difficult. Methods based on antibody detection (e.g. nephelometry) do not distinguish between active C3 and inactive breakdown products. C3-specific haemolytic assays can be used, but these require use of relatively unstable reagents. The current work represents a promising robust, enzyme- and antibody-free chemical method for detecting active thioester proteins in blood, plasma or serum.
0171-2985
256-264
Holm, Lotta
c2032b13-727d-4593-8cfa-d2b931b8bbf2
Ackland, Gareth L.
a39cc4b9-a733-405f-bd1a-a86ab57292a0
Edwards, Mark R.
818201d5-7636-4292-9af8-7dd8bcd1fcb5
Breckenridge, Ross A.
943942d0-5eca-4746-9b7b-1fa15399840c
Sim, Robert B.
af835975-64a2-4d62-9d43-cf3ea77a622a
Offer, John
99d3a74c-acb2-4e73-bd04-332c5c4dc9a4
Holm, Lotta
c2032b13-727d-4593-8cfa-d2b931b8bbf2
Ackland, Gareth L.
a39cc4b9-a733-405f-bd1a-a86ab57292a0
Edwards, Mark R.
818201d5-7636-4292-9af8-7dd8bcd1fcb5
Breckenridge, Ross A.
943942d0-5eca-4746-9b7b-1fa15399840c
Sim, Robert B.
af835975-64a2-4d62-9d43-cf3ea77a622a
Offer, John
99d3a74c-acb2-4e73-bd04-332c5c4dc9a4

Holm, Lotta, Ackland, Gareth L., Edwards, Mark R., Breckenridge, Ross A., Sim, Robert B. and Offer, John (2013) Chemical labelling of active serum thioester proteins for quantification. Immunobiology, 217 (2), 256-264, [884]. (doi:10.1016/j.imbio.2011.07.021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The complement serum proteins C3 and C4 and the protease inhibitor α-2 macroglobulin are all members of the C3/α-2M thioester protein family, an evolutionarily ancient and conserved family that contains an intrachain thioester bond. The chemistry of the thioester bond is a key to the function of the thioester proteins. All these proteins function by covalently linking to their target by acyl transfer of the protein via the thioester moiety. We show that the signature thioester bond can be targeted with nucleophiles linked to a bioreporter molecule, site-specifically modifying the whole, intact thioester protein. Conditions were optimised to label selectively and efficiently pull-down unprocessed thioester-containing proteins from serum. We demonstrated pull-down of full-length C3, α-2M and C4 from sera in high salt, using a biotinylated nucleophile and streptavidin-coated resin, confirmed by MALDI-TOF MS identification of the gel bands. The potential for the development of a quantitative method for measuring active C3 in serum was investigated in patient sera pre and post operation. Quantifying active C3 in clinical assays using current methods is difficult. Methods based on antibody detection (e.g. nephelometry) do not distinguish between active C3 and inactive breakdown products. C3-specific haemolytic assays can be used, but these require use of relatively unstable reagents. The current work represents a promising robust, enzyme- and antibody-free chemical method for detecting active thioester proteins in blood, plasma or serum.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2012
Published date: 23 July 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 437022
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437022
ISSN: 0171-2985
PURE UUID: 2f5baebf-28a8-461c-af02-bdce3bbd1a67

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Date deposited: 15 Jan 2020 17:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:59

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Contributors

Author: Lotta Holm
Author: Gareth L. Ackland
Author: Mark R. Edwards
Author: Ross A. Breckenridge
Author: Robert B. Sim
Author: John Offer

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