Trypsinogen

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CAS: 9002-08-8
MF: C41H60N10O20
MW: 1012.9701
Synonyms: Trypsinogen

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Xuefen Wang

Donghua University
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Neil L. Kelleher

Northwestern University
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Ying Ge

University of Wisconsin?Madison
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Co-reporter: Bifan Chen, Ying Peng, Santosh G. Valeja, Lichen Xiu, Andrew J. Alpert, and Ying Ge
pp: 1885
Publication Date(Web):January 5, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5b04285
Recent progress in top-down proteomics has led to a demand for mass spectrometry (MS)-compatible chromatography techniques to separate intact proteins using volatile mobile phases. Conventional hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) provides high-resolution separation of proteins under nondenaturing conditions but requires high concentrations of nonvolatile salts. Herein, we introduce a series of more-hydrophobic HIC materials that can retain proteins using MS-compatible concentrations of ammonium acetate. The new HIC materials appear to function as a hybrid form of conventional HIC and reverse phase chromatography. The function of the salt seems to be preserving protein structure rather than promoting retention. Online HIC-MS is feasible for both qualitative and quantitative analysis. This is demonstrated with standard proteins and a complex cell lysate. The mass spectra of proteins from the online HIC-MS exhibit low charge-state distributions, consistent with those commonly observed in native MS. Furthermore, HIC-MS can chromatographically separate proteoforms differing by minor modifications. Hence, this new HIC-MS combination is promising for top-down proteomics.

Robert Sievers

University of Colorado Boulder
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Milton L. Lee

Brigham Young University
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Cheng Lee

University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Wenwan Zhong

University of California
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Co-reporter: Jonathan Ashby, Songqin Pan, and Wenwan Zhong
pp: 15412
Publication Date(Web):August 21, 2014
DOI: 10.1021/am503909q
Nanoparticles (NPs) adsorb proteins when in the biological matrix, and the resulted protein corona could affect NP-cell interactions. The corona has a dynamic nature with the adsorbed proteins constantly exchanging with the free proteins in the matrix at various rates. The rapidly exchanging proteins compose the soft corona, which responds more dynamically to environment changes than the hard corona established by the ones with slow exchange rates. In the present study, the corona formed on the superparamagnetic iron oxide NPs (SPIONs) in human serum was studied by flow field-flow fractionation and ultracentrifugation, which rapidly differentiated the corona proteins based on their exchange rates. By varying the surface hydrophobicity of the SPIONs with a core size around 10 nm, we found out that, the more hydrophobic surface ligand attracted proteins with higher surface hydrophobicity and formed a more dynamic corona with a larger portion of the involved proteins with fast exchange rates. Increasing the core diameter of the SPIONs but keeping the surface ligand the same could also result in a more dynamic corona. A brief investigation of the effect on the cellular uptake of SPIONs using one selected corona protein, transferrin, was conducted. The result showed that, only the stably bound transferrin could significantly enhance cellular uptake, while transferrin bound in a dynamic nature had negligible impact. Our study has led to a better understanding of the relationship between the particle properties and the dynamic nature of the corona, which can help with design of nanomaterials with higher biocompatibility and higher efficacy in biosystems for biomedical applications.Keywords: field flow fractionation; protein binding kinetics; protein corona; surface hydrophobicity

Renee D. JiJi

University of Missouri
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Shao-Rong Liu

University of Oklahoma
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Brian M. Paegel

The Scripps Research Institute
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