TY - JOUR
T1 - Methylene as a possible universal footprinting reagent that will include hydrophobic surface areas
T2 - Overview and feasibility: Properties of diazirine as a precursor
AU - Richards, Frederic M.
AU - Lamed, Raphael
AU - Wynn, Richard
AU - Patel, Darshan
AU - Olack, Gerard
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Methylene is one of, if not the, most reactive organic chemical known. It has a very low specificity, which makes it essentially useless for synthesis, but suggests a possible role in protein footprinting with special importance in labeling solvent accessible nonpolar areas, identifying ligand binding sites, and outlining interaction areas on protomers that form homo or hetero oligomers in cellular assemblies. The singlet species is easily and conveniently formed by photolysis of diazirine. The reactions of interest are insertion into C-H bonds and addition tO multiple bonds, both forming strong covalent bonds and stable compounds. Reaction with proteins and peptides is reported even in aqueous solutions where the vast majority of the reagent is used up in forming methanol. Species containing up to 5 to 10 extra :CH2 groups are easily detected by electrospray mass spectroscopy. In a mixture of a 14 Kd protein and a noninteracting 1.7 Kd peptide, the distribution of mass peaks in the electrospray spectra was close to that expected from random modification of the estimated solvent accessible area for the two molecules. For analysis at the single residue level, quantitation at labeling levels of one 13CH2 group per 10 to 20 kDa of protein appears to be possible with isotope ratio mass spectroscopy. In the absence of reactive solvents, photolysis of diazirine produces oily polymeric species that contain one or two nitrogen atoms, but not more, and are water soluble.
AB - Methylene is one of, if not the, most reactive organic chemical known. It has a very low specificity, which makes it essentially useless for synthesis, but suggests a possible role in protein footprinting with special importance in labeling solvent accessible nonpolar areas, identifying ligand binding sites, and outlining interaction areas on protomers that form homo or hetero oligomers in cellular assemblies. The singlet species is easily and conveniently formed by photolysis of diazirine. The reactions of interest are insertion into C-H bonds and addition tO multiple bonds, both forming strong covalent bonds and stable compounds. Reaction with proteins and peptides is reported even in aqueous solutions where the vast majority of the reagent is used up in forming methanol. Species containing up to 5 to 10 extra :CH2 groups are easily detected by electrospray mass spectroscopy. In a mixture of a 14 Kd protein and a noninteracting 1.7 Kd peptide, the distribution of mass peaks in the electrospray spectra was close to that expected from random modification of the estimated solvent accessible area for the two molecules. For analysis at the single residue level, quantitation at labeling levels of one 13CH2 group per 10 to 20 kDa of protein appears to be possible with isotope ratio mass spectroscopy. In the absence of reactive solvents, photolysis of diazirine produces oily polymeric species that contain one or two nitrogen atoms, but not more, and are water soluble.
KW - Diazirine
KW - Methylene
KW - Nonpolar
KW - Photochemical labeling
KW - Protein footprinting
KW - Surface area
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034493026&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1110/ps.9.12.2506
DO - 10.1110/ps.9.12.2506
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C2 - 11206072
AN - SCOPUS:0034493026
SN - 0961-8368
VL - 9
SP - 2506
EP - 2517
JO - Protein Science
JF - Protein Science
IS - 12
ER -