Method for Determining Protein Kinase Substrate Specificities by the Phosphorylation of Peptide Libraries on Beads, Phosphate-Specific Staining, Automated Sorting, and Sequencing
✍ Scribed by Rainer Gast; Jörn Glökler; Maria Höxter; Michael Kieß; Ronald Frank; Werner Tegge
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 258 KB
- Volume
- 276
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
A method is described for the elucidation of the peptide substrate phosphorylation specificity of a protein kinase. Peptide libraries with two to six degenerate positions and a length of seven or nine amino acids were generated directly on Sepharose beads by solidphase peptide synthesis according to the split-and-mix procedure. The immobilized peptides were incubated with the catalytic subunit of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) as a model enzyme resulting in the phosphorylation of the beads that contain the recognition motif of the kinase. The beads were then stained with a new phosphate-monoester-specific fluorescent dye consisting of a complex of iron(III) with fluorescein-coupled iminodiacetic acid. A flow cytometer was used to analyze the phosphorylation efficiency and the beads with the highest phosphorylation degree were isolated by the use of a fluorescenceactivated cell sorter. Pool sequencing of those beads revealed the preferred kinase motif. The results are in good agreement with data from the literature. The method lends itself to the rapid elucidation of the specificity of uncharacterized protein kinases.