FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
Reference Report
Open Close
Reference
Citation
Torres, M.P., Thapar, R., Marzluff, W.F., Borchers, C.H. (2005). Phosphatase-directed phosphorylation-site determination: a synthesis of methods for the detection and identification of phosphopeptides.  J. Proteome Res. 4(5): 1628--1635.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0191064
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Phosphopeptides can be difficult to detect and sequence by mass spectrometry (MS) due to low ionization efficiency and suppression effects in the MS mode, and insufficient fragmentation in the tandem MS (MS/MS) mode, respectively. To address this problem, we have developed a technique called Phosphatase-directed Phosphorylation-site Determination (PPD), which combines on-target phosphatase reactions, MALDI MS/MS of IMAC beads on target, and hypothesis-driven MS (HD-MS). In this method, on-target dephosphorylation experiments are conducted on IMAC-bound phosphopeptides, because dephosphorylated peptides have, in general, higher MS sensitivities than the corresponding phosphopeptides. The detected dephosphorylated peptides are sequenced by MS/MS, which identifies the potentially phosphorylated peptide and the total number of Ser, Thr, or Tyr residues that could hypothetically be phosphorylated within that peptide. On the basis of this information, a mass list containing every possible phosphorylation state of each observed peptide (where 1 HPO(3) = 80 Da) is used to direct MALDI-MS/MS on the phosphorylated peptides bound to IMAC beads at each theoretical mass from the list. If the peptide is present, the resulting MS/MS spectrum reveals the exact site(s) of phosphorylation in the peptide. We have demonstrated the applicability of PPD to the detection of in vivo phosphorylation sites on the Drosophila Stem Loop Binding Protein (dSLBP), and the complementarity of this new technique to conventional MS phosphorylation site mapping methods, since the phosphorylation sites in dSLBP could not be detected by other methods.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Associated Information
Comments
Associated Files
Other Information
Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    J. Proteome Res.
    Title
    Journal of Proteome Research
    Publication Year
    2002
    ISBN/ISSN
    1535-3893
    Data From Reference
    Genes (1)