A novel proteomic approach for the identification and relative quantification of disulfide-bridges in the human milk proteome

被引:0
作者
Thesbjerg, Martin Normark [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Sundekilde, Ulrik Kramer [1 ]
Poulsen, Nina Aagaard [1 ]
Larsen, Lotte Bach [1 ]
Nielsen, Soren Drud-Heydary [1 ]
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ, Dept Food Sci, Agro Food Pk 48, DK-8200 Aarhus N, Denmark
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sino Danish Coll SDC, Huairou Dist, Beijing 101408, Peoples R China
[3] Martin Normark Thesbjerg, Dept Food Sci, Agro Food Pk 48, DK-8200 Aarhus, Denmark
关键词
Human milk; Protein; Disulfide bridges; Mass spectrometry; Proteomics; Protein aggregates; ALPHA-LACTALBUMIN; HUMAN ALPHA(S1)-CASEIN; HUMAN LACTOFERRIN; CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE; MOLTEN GLOBULE; REVEALS; PROTEINS; CASEIN; BONDS; LOCALIZATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jprot.2024.105194
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
This study explores the disulfide bridges present in the human milk proteome by a novel approach permitting both positional identification and relative quantification of the disulfide bridges. Human milk from six donors was subjected to trypsin digestion without reduction. The digested human milk proteins were analyzed by nanoLC-timsTOF Pro combined with data analysis using xiSEARCH. A total of 85 unique disulfide bridges were identified in 25 different human milk proteins. The total relative abundance of disulfide bridge -containing peptides constituted approximately 5% of the total amount of tryptic-peptides. Seven inter -molecular disulfide bridges were identified between either alpha-lactalbumin and lactotransferrin (5) or alpha S1-casein and kappa-casein (2). All cysteines involved in the observed disulfide bridges of alpha-lactalbumin and lactotransferrin were mapped onto protein models using AlphaFold2 Multimer to estimate the length of the observed disulfide bridges. The lengths of the disulfide bridges of lactotransferrin indicate a potential for multi- or poly-merization of lactotransferrin. The high number of intramolecular lactotransferrin disulfide bridges identified, suggests that these are more heterogeneous than previously presumed. Significance: Disulfide -bridges in the human milk proteome are an often overseen post-transaltional modification. Thus, mapping the disulfide -bridges, their positions and relative abundance, are valuable new knowledge needed for an improved understanding of human milk protein behaviour. Although glycosylation and phosphorylation have been described, even less information is available on the disulfide bridges and the disulfide -bridge derived protein complexes. This is important for future work in precision fermentation for recombinant production of human milk proteins, as this will highlight which disulfide -bridges are naturally occouring in human milk proteins. Further, this knowledge would be of value for the infant formula industry as it provides more information on how to humanize bovine -milk based infant formula. The novel method developed here can be broadly applied in other biological systems as the disulfid-brigdes are important for the structure and functionality of proteins.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 64 条
  • [1] Apweiler R, 2004, NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, V32, pD115, DOI [10.1093/nar/gkw1099, 10.1093/nar/gkh131]
  • [2] Proteins and proteolysis in pre-term and term human milk and possible implications for infant formulae
    Armaforte, Emanuele
    Curran, Erika
    Huppertz, Thom
    Ryan, C. Anthony
    Caboni, Maria F.
    O'Connor, Paula M.
    Ross, R. Paul
    Hirtz, Christophe
    Sommerer, Nicolas
    Chevalier, Francois
    Kelly, Alan L.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL DAIRY JOURNAL, 2010, 20 (10) : 715 - 723
  • [3] Babina SE, 2006, MOL BIOL+, V40, P137
  • [4] Anion binding by transferrins: Importance of second-shell effects revealed by the crystal structure of oxalate-substituted diferric lactoferrin
    Baker, HM
    Anderson, BF
    Brodie, AM
    Shongwe, MS
    Smith, CA
    Baker, EN
    [J]. BIOCHEMISTRY, 1996, 35 (28) : 9007 - 9013
  • [5] Berg J.M., 2007, Biochemistry, V6th
  • [6] Comparative Analysis of Whey N-Glycoproteins in Human Colostrum and Mature Milk Using Quantitative Glycoproteomics
    Cao, Xueyan
    Song, Dahe
    Yang, Mei
    Yang, Ning
    Ye, Qing
    Tao, Dongbing
    Liu, Biao
    Wu, Rina
    Yue, Xiqing
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2017, 65 (47) : 10360 - 10367
  • [7] A cross-platform toolkit for mass spectrometry and proteomics
    Chambers, Matthew C.
    Maclean, Brendan
    Burke, Robert
    Amodei, Dario
    Ruderman, Daniel L.
    Neumann, Steffen
    Gatto, Laurent
    Fischer, Bernd
    Pratt, Brian
    Egertson, Jarrett
    Hoff, Katherine
    Kessner, Darren
    Tasman, Natalie
    Shulman, Nicholas
    Frewen, Barbara
    Baker, Tahmina A.
    Brusniak, Mi-Youn
    Paulse, Christopher
    Creasy, David
    Flashner, Lisa
    Kani, Kian
    Moulding, Chris
    Seymour, Sean L.
    Nuwaysir, Lydia M.
    Lefebvre, Brent
    Kuhlmann, Frank
    Roark, Joe
    Rainer, Paape
    Detlev, Suckau
    Hemenway, Tina
    Huhmer, Andreas
    Langridge, James
    Connolly, Brian
    Chadick, Trey
    Holly, Krisztina
    Eckels, Josh
    Deutsch, Eric W.
    Moritz, Robert L.
    Katz, Jonathan E.
    Agus, David B.
    MacCoss, Michael
    Tabb, David L.
    Mallick, Parag
    [J]. NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2012, 30 (10) : 918 - 920
  • [8] Structural evidence for the presence of a secondary calcium binding site in human α-lactalbumin
    Chandra, N
    Brew, K
    Acharya, KR
    [J]. BIOCHEMISTRY, 1998, 37 (14) : 4767 - 4772
  • [9] Cysteine Oxidative Posttranslational Modifications Emerging Regulation in the Cardiovascular System
    Chung, Heaseung S.
    Wang, Sheng-Bing
    Venkatraman, Vidya
    Murray, Christopher I.
    Van Eyk, Jennifer E.
    [J]. CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 2013, 112 (02) : 382 - 392
  • [10] Proteomic Characterization of Native and Rearranged Disulfide Bonds in Proteins from Thermally Treated and Commercial Milk Samples
    Ciaravolo, Valentina
    Scaloni, Andrea
    Novi, Gianfranco
    Renzone, Giovanni
    Arena, Simona
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2023, 71 (26) : 10212 - 10225