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Conversion of S–phenylsulfonylcysteine residues to mixed disulfides at pH 4.0: utility in protein thiol blocking and in protein–S–nitrosothiol detection

Authors :
Benjamin D. Reeves
Jonathan K. Hilmer
J. N. Reinschmidt
Gregory C. Campanello
David J. Singel
Paul A. Grieco
David P. Giedroc
J. A. Vance
Edward A. Dratz
L. Chetia
Colin G. Miller
Neelambari Joshi
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

A three step protocol for protein S-nitrosothiol conversion to fluorescent mixed disulfides with purified proteins, referred to as the thiosulfonate switch, is explored which involves: (1) thiol blocking at pH 4.0 using S-phenylsulfonylcysteine (SPSC); (2) trapping of protein S-nitrosothiols as their S-phenylsulfonylcysteines employing sodium benzenesulfinate; and (3) tagging the protein thiosulfonate with a fluorescent rhodamine based probe bearing a reactive thiol (Rhod-SH), which forms a mixed disulfide between the probe and the formerly S-nitrosated cysteine residue. S-Nitrosated bovine serum albumin and the S-nitrosated C-terminally truncated form of AdhR-SH (alcohol dehydrogenase regulator) designated as AdhR*-SNO were selectively labelled by the thiosulfonate switch both individually and in protein mixtures containing free thiols. This protocol features the facile reaction of thiols with S-phenylsulfonylcysteines forming mixed disulfides at mild acidic pH (pH = 4.0) in both the initial blocking step as well as in the conversion of protein-S-sulfonylcysteines to form stable fluorescent disulfides. Labelling was monitored by TOF-MS and gel electrophoresis. Proteolysis and peptide analysis of the resulting digest identified the cysteine residues containing mixed disulfides bearing the fluorescent probe, Rhod-SH.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ec7c4cd0343fa5d18ca1ebf7f819d1c