Abstract
ABSTRACTThe high affinity of biotin to streptavidin has made it one of the most widely used affinity tags in proteomics. Early methods used biotin for enrichment alone and mostly ignored the biotin labeled peptide. Recent advances in labeling led to an increase in biotinylation efficiency and shifted the interest to detection of the site of biotinylation. This increased confidence in identification and provides additional structural information yet it requires efficient release of the biotinylated protein/peptide and sensitive separation and detection of biotinylated peptides by LC-MS/MS. Despite its long use in affinity proteomics the effect of biotinylation on the chromatographic, ionization, and fragmentation behaviour and ultimate detection of peptides is not well understood. To address this we compare two commercially-available biotin labels EZ-Link Sulfo-NHS-Biotin and Sulfo-NHS-SS-Biotin, the latter one containing a labile linker to efficiently release biotin to determine the effects of peptide modification on peptide detection. We describe an increase of hydrophobicity and charge reduction with increasing number of biotin labels attached. Based on our data we recommend gradient optimization to account for more hydrophobic biotinylated peptides and include singly charged precursors to account for charge reduction by biotin.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory