Lysine deacetylases or histone deacetylases (HDACs) remove acetylation markers from numerous cellular proteins, thereby regulating their function and activity. Recently established peptide probes containing the HDAC-trapping amino acid α-aminosuberic acid ω-hydroxamate (AsuHd) have been used to investigate the compositions of HDAC complexes in a site-specific manner. Here we report the new HDAC-trapping amino acid 2-amino-8-[(2-aminophenyl)amino]-8-oxooctanoic acid (AsuApa) and the utility of AsuApa-containing probes for HDAC complex profiling on a proteome-wide scale. Unlike AsuHd-containing probes, AsuApa enriched only HDACs 1, 2, and 3 efficiently and was the most potent probe tested for capturing the last of these. These findings indicate that the inherent specificity of reported small-molecule pimelic diphenylamide HDAC inhibitors is preserved in AsuApa and that this HDAC-trapping amino acid represents a potent tool for investigating class I HDAC complexes.
Keywords: HDACs; lysine acetylation; peptide-based probes; protein modifications; proteomics.
© 2019 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.