Defeating Major Contaminants in Fe3+- Immobilized Metal Ion Affinity Chromatography (IMAC) Phosphopeptide Enrichment

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2018 May;17(5):1028-1034. doi: 10.1074/mcp.TIR117.000518. Epub 2018 Feb 15.

Abstract

Here we demonstrate that biomolecular contaminants, such as nucleic acid molecules, can seriously interfere with immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC)-based phosphopeptide enrichments. We address and largely solve this issue, developing a robust protocol implementing methanol/chloroform protein precipitation and enzymatic digestion using benzonase, which degrades all forms of DNA and RNA, before IMAC-column loading. This simple procedure resulted in a drastic increase of enrichment sensitivity, enabling the identification of around 17,000 unique phosphopeptides and 12,500 unambiguously localized phosphosites in human cell-lines from a single LC-MS/MS run, constituting a 50% increase when compared with the standard protocol. The improved protocol was also applied to bacterial samples, increasing the number of identified bacterial phosphopeptides even more strikingly, by a factor 10, when compared with the standard protocol. For E. coli we detected around 1300 unambiguously localized phosphosites per LC-MS/MS run. The preparation of these ultra-pure phosphopeptide samples only requires marginal extra costs and sample preparation time and should thus be adoptable by every laboratory active in the field of phosphoproteomics.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Chromatography, Affinity / methods*
  • HEK293 Cells
  • HeLa Cells
  • Humans
  • Ions
  • Iron / chemistry*
  • Phosphopeptides / metabolism*
  • Reference Standards

Substances

  • Ions
  • Phosphopeptides
  • Iron