1. Academic Validation
  2. The Impact of Commonly Used Alkylating Agents on Artifactual Peptide Modification

The Impact of Commonly Used Alkylating Agents on Artifactual Peptide Modification

  • J Proteome Res. 2017 Sep 1;16(9):3443-3447. doi: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.7b00022.
Peter G Hains 1 Phillip J Robinson 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 ProCan and the Cell Signalling Units, Children's Medical Research Institute, The University of Sydney , 214 Hawkesbury Road, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia.
Abstract

Iodoacetamide is by far the most commonly used agent for alkylation of cysteine during sample preparation for proteomics. An alternative, 2-chloroacetamide, has recently been suggested to reduce the alkylation of residues other than cysteine, such as the N-terminus, Asp, Glu, Lys, Ser, Thr, and Tyr. Here we show that although 2-chloroacetamide reduces the level of off-target alkylation, it exhibits a range of adverse effects. The most significant of these is methionine oxidation, which increases to a maximum of 40% of all Met-containing Peptides, compared with 2-5% with iodoacetamide. Increases were also observed for mono- and dioxidized tryptophan. No additional differences between the alkylating reagents were observed for a range of other post-translational modifications and digestion parameters. The deleterious effects were observed for 2-chloroacetamide from three separate suppliers. The adverse impact of 2-chloroacetamide on methionine oxidation suggests that it is not the ideal alkylating reagent for proteomics.

Keywords

N-terminal alkylation; alkylation; artifact; cysteine alkylation; post-translational modification.

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