Abstract
The most challenging and fruitful biomedical research endeavor of this decade will be the mapping of cell signaling systems and establishing their linkages to normal and disease-related processes. Amongst other things, the Human Genome Sequencing Project has greatly facilitated MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry identification of proteins that have been resolved by standard 2D gel electrophoresis. However, the low abundance of protein kinases and other signal transduction proteins has rendered their analyses particularly problematic without some means of purification and enrichment from cell and tissue lysates. Antibodies have been the most specific affinity probes for tracking target proteins, but their variable quality and high cost preclude their deployment in most discovery-based proteomics studies. Current multi-immunoblotting techniques can permit the probing of a single mini-SDS-PAGE gel with 50 or more antibodies at a time to monitor large changes in the expression and phosphorylation states of signaling proteins. The development of new affinity probes to replace antibodies is necessary to drive large scale proteomics studies. Such affinity probes could include short peptide antibody mimetics (PAMs) and oligonucleotide aptamers that when spotted in 2D array formats (e.g. membrane macroarrays, glass microarrays) or presented on specific beads (e.g. Luminex-beads) can capture target proteins for their specific enrichment. The bound target proteins can then be detected using reporter antibodies or other specific probes for their quantitation by high throughput systems. These new proteomics methodologies will accelerate assessment of specific protein expression, post-translational modification, protein-protein interactions and protein-drug interactions to provide a more holistic view of cellular operations and how they might be manipulated under pathological circumstances.
Keywords: proteomics, immunoblotting, protein kinase, phosphorylation, affinity probes, peptide antibody mimetic