In-solution buffer-free digestion for the analysis of SARS-CoV-2 RBD proteins allows a full sequence coverage and detection of post-translational modifications in a single ESI-MS spectrum
Author:
Espinosa Luis ArielORCID, Ramos YasselORCID, Andújar IvanORCID, Torres Enso OnillORCID, Cabrera GleysinORCID, Martín AlejandroORCID, González Diamilé, Chinea Glay, Becquet MónicaORCID, González Isabel, Canaán-Haden CamilaORCID, Nelson Elías, Rojas Gertrudis, Pérez-Massón Beatriz, Pérez-Martínez Dayana, Boggiano Tamy, Palacio Julio, Lozada-Chang Sum Lai, Hernández Lourdes, de la Luz Hernández Kathya RashidaORCID, Markku Saloheimo, Marika Vitikainen, Valdés-Balbín YuryORCID, Santana-Medero Darielys, Rivera Daniel G.ORCID, Vérez-Bencomo VicenteORCID, Emalfarb Mark, Tchelet Ronen, Guillén GerardoORCID, Limonta Miladys, Pimentel EulogioORCID, Ayala MartaORCID, Besada VladimirORCID, González Luis JavierORCID
Abstract
AbstractSubunit vaccines based on the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2, are among the most promising strategies to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. The detailed characterization of the protein primary structure by mass spectrometry (MS) is mandatory, as described in ICHQ6B guidelines. In this work, several recombinant RBD proteins produced in five expression systems were characterized using a non-conventional protocol known as in-solution buffer-free digestion (BFD). In a single ESI-MS spectrum, BFD allowed very high sequence coverage (≥ 99 %) and the detection of highly hydrophilic regions, including very short and hydrophilic peptides (2-8 amino acids), the His6-tagged C-terminal peptide carrying several post-translational modifications at Cys538 such as cysteinylation, glutathionylation, cyanilation, among others. The analysis using the conventional digestion protocol allowed lower sequence coverage (80-90 %) and did not detect peptides carrying some of the above-mentioned post-translational modifications. The two C-terminal peptides of a dimer [RBD(319-541)-(His)6]2 linked by an intermolecular disulfide bond (Cys538-Cys538) with twelve histidine residues were only detected by BFD. This protocol allows the detection of the four disulfide bonds present in the native RBD and the low-abundance scrambling variants, free cysteine residues, O-glycoforms and incomplete processing of the N-terminal end, if present. Artifacts that might be generated by the in-solution BFD protocol were also characterized. BFD can be easily implemented and we foresee that it can be also helpful to the characterization of mutated RBD.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference61 articles.
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