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Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity

Alternative splicing dramatically increases transcriptome complexity but its contribution to proteome diversity remains controversial. Exon-exon junction spanning peptides provide direct evidence for the translation of specific splice isoforms and are critical for delineating protein isoform complex...

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Autores principales: Wang, Xiaojing, Codreanu, Simona G., Wen, Bo, Li, Kai, Chambers, Matthew C., Liebler, Daniel C., Zhang, Bing
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5836368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29222161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA117.000155
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author Wang, Xiaojing
Codreanu, Simona G.
Wen, Bo
Li, Kai
Chambers, Matthew C.
Liebler, Daniel C.
Zhang, Bing
author_facet Wang, Xiaojing
Codreanu, Simona G.
Wen, Bo
Li, Kai
Chambers, Matthew C.
Liebler, Daniel C.
Zhang, Bing
author_sort Wang, Xiaojing
collection PubMed
description Alternative splicing dramatically increases transcriptome complexity but its contribution to proteome diversity remains controversial. Exon-exon junction spanning peptides provide direct evidence for the translation of specific splice isoforms and are critical for delineating protein isoform complexity. Here we found that junction-spanning peptides are underrepresented in publicly available mass spectrometry-based shotgun proteomics data sets. Further analysis showed that evolutionarily conserved preferential nucleotide usage at exon boundaries increases the occurrence of lysine- and arginine-coding triplets at the end of exons. Because both lysine and arginine residues are cleavage sites of trypsin, the nearly exclusive use of trypsin as the protein digestion enzyme in shotgun proteomic analyses hinders the detection of junction-spanning peptides. To study the impact of enzyme selection on splice junction detectability, we performed in-silico digestion of the human proteome using six proteases. The six enzymes created a total of 161,125 detectable junctions, and only 1,029 were common across all enzyme digestions. Chymotrypsin digestion provided the largest number of detectable junctions. Our experimental results further showed that combination of a chymotrypsin-based human proteome analysis with a trypsin-based analysis increased detection of junction-spanning peptides by 37% over the trypsin-only analysis and identified over a thousand junctions that were undetectable in fully tryptic digests. Our study demonstrates that detection of proteome diversity resulted from alternative splicing is limited by trypsin cleavage specificity, and that complementary digestion schemes will be essential to comprehensively analyze the translation of alternative splicing isoforms.
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spelling pubmed-58363682018-03-06 Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity Wang, Xiaojing Codreanu, Simona G. Wen, Bo Li, Kai Chambers, Matthew C. Liebler, Daniel C. Zhang, Bing Mol Cell Proteomics Research Alternative splicing dramatically increases transcriptome complexity but its contribution to proteome diversity remains controversial. Exon-exon junction spanning peptides provide direct evidence for the translation of specific splice isoforms and are critical for delineating protein isoform complexity. Here we found that junction-spanning peptides are underrepresented in publicly available mass spectrometry-based shotgun proteomics data sets. Further analysis showed that evolutionarily conserved preferential nucleotide usage at exon boundaries increases the occurrence of lysine- and arginine-coding triplets at the end of exons. Because both lysine and arginine residues are cleavage sites of trypsin, the nearly exclusive use of trypsin as the protein digestion enzyme in shotgun proteomic analyses hinders the detection of junction-spanning peptides. To study the impact of enzyme selection on splice junction detectability, we performed in-silico digestion of the human proteome using six proteases. The six enzymes created a total of 161,125 detectable junctions, and only 1,029 were common across all enzyme digestions. Chymotrypsin digestion provided the largest number of detectable junctions. Our experimental results further showed that combination of a chymotrypsin-based human proteome analysis with a trypsin-based analysis increased detection of junction-spanning peptides by 37% over the trypsin-only analysis and identified over a thousand junctions that were undetectable in fully tryptic digests. Our study demonstrates that detection of proteome diversity resulted from alternative splicing is limited by trypsin cleavage specificity, and that complementary digestion schemes will be essential to comprehensively analyze the translation of alternative splicing isoforms. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2018-03 2017-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5836368/ /pubmed/29222161 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA117.000155 Text en © 2018 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version free via Creative Commons CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) .
spellingShingle Research
Wang, Xiaojing
Codreanu, Simona G.
Wen, Bo
Li, Kai
Chambers, Matthew C.
Liebler, Daniel C.
Zhang, Bing
Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title_full Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title_fullStr Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title_full_unstemmed Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title_short Detection of Proteome Diversity Resulted from Alternative Splicing is Limited by Trypsin Cleavage Specificity
title_sort detection of proteome diversity resulted from alternative splicing is limited by trypsin cleavage specificity
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5836368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29222161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA117.000155
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