Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics, National Demonstration Center for Experimental Biomedical Engineering Education Southeast University Nanjing 210096 China
2. Department of Hematology Huashan Hospital Shanghai 200040 China
3. Department of Biochemistry, Department of Biochemistry Purdue University West Lafayette IN 47907 USA
4. Institute for Cancer Research Purdue University West Lafayette IN 47907 USA
Abstract
AbstractMany biological processes are regulated through dynamic protein phosphorylation. Monitoring disease‐relevant phosphorylation events in circulating biofluids is highly appealing but also technically challenging. We introduce here a functionally tunable material and a strategy, extracellular vesicles to phosphoproteins (EVTOP), which achieves one‐pot extracellular vesicles (EVs) isolation, extraction, and digestion of EV proteins, and enrichment of phosphopeptides, with only a trace amount of starting biofluids. EVs are efficiently isolated by magnetic beads functionalized with TiIV ions and a membrane‐penetrating peptide, octa‐arginine R8+, which also provides the hydrophilic surface to retain EV proteins during lysis. Subsequent on‐bead digestion concurrently converts EVTOP to TiIV ion‐only surface for efficient enrichment of phosphopeptides for phosphoproteomic analyses. The streamlined, ultra‐sensitive platform enabled us to quantify 500 unique EV phosphopeptides with only a few μL of plasma and over 1200 phosphopeptides with 100 μL of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). We explored its clinical application of monitoring the outcome of chemotherapy of primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) patients with a small volume of CSF, presenting a powerful tool for broad clinical applications.
Funder
Key Technologies Research and Development Program
NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research