High-performance liquid chromatographic method to measure protein L-isoaspartyl/D-aspartyl o-methyltransferase activity in cell lysates.
Furuchi. Takemitsu T; Kosugi. Sakurako S; Ohno. Keiko K; Egawa. Tsukasa T; Sekine. Masae M; Katane. Masumi M; Homma. Hiroshi H
Key Findings
- A fluorescently labeled DSIP (NBDâDSIP) can serve as a substrate for the protein repair enzyme PIMT.
- The assay detects methylation of the peptide by highâperformance liquid chromatography, achieving a detection limit of ~1âŻpmol.
- The method works on small amounts of cell lysate (â18âŻÂ”g) and avoids the use of radioisotopes.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this study doesnât change how you would take DSIP or any supplement, as itâs a laboratory technique for measuring enzyme activity. It may be useful only if youâre running a DIY biochemistry lab and need a nonâradioactive way to monitor protein repair pathways.
Summary
Scientists created a new lab test that uses a fluorescent version of the sleepâinducing peptide (DSIP) to measure how well cells repair damaged proteins, without needing radioactive materials. The test is very sensitive and can detect tiny amounts of enzyme activity in cell samples.
Abstract
Protein L-isoaspartyl/D-aspartyl o-methyltransferase (PIMT) is a widely expressed protein repair enzyme that restores isomerized aspartyl residues to their normal configuration. Current methods for measuring PIMT activity have limited sensitivity or require radioactivity. We have developed a highly sensitive new assay method to measure PIMT activity in cell lysates. As a substrate, we used a fluorescently labeled delta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) that contains an isoaspartyl residue: 7-nitro-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole (NBD)-DSIP(isoAsp). The PIMT-catalyzed transfer of a methyl group onto this substrate can be detected with a simple high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) procedure. After the enzyme reaction, the methylated form of the peptide is stable and can be reproducibly separated from the unmethylated form in an acidic solvent and fluorometrically detected by HPLC. The limit of detection was estimated to be approximately 1 pmol of NBD-DSIP(isoAsp) (signal/noise ratio [S/N]=3), and the quantitation limit of the activity was approximately 18 microg of total cell lysate from HEK293 cells (10.7 pmol/min/mg protein). This assay method is sensitive enough to detect PIMT activity in biological samples without the use of radioisotopes, offering significant advantages over previously reported methods.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-10-02T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ab.2008.09.043
3
17