A mass spectrometry-based proteomics strategy to detect long-chain S-acylated peptides
Abstract
Long-chain S-acylation is the addition of long-chain fatty acids to cysteine residues on proteins. This lipid modification is essential for protein membrane association and signalling but presents analytical challenges due to both its hydrophobicity and the labile nature of thioester bonds. We developed and optimised a bottom-up mass spectrometry workflow tailored for the detection of long-chain S-acylated peptides. Following liquid chromatography optimisation for improved separation and elution of long-chain S-acylated peptides from a C18 stationary phase, we investigated thioester stability under typical proteomics sample preparation conditions, including variations in pH, reducing agents, and trypsin digestion. Stability analyses revealed that long-chain S-acylated peptides were generally resistant to pH variations and reducing agents, while extended digestion times resulted in a loss of signal from some peptides. For MS/MS analysis, CID, HCD and ETD were applied to analyse long-chain S-acylated peptides. Neutral losses of the modification were observed with all these fragmentation methods. However, HCD proved to be the most effective, as the fragment ions resulting from the neutral losses provided sequence information, unlike those from CID and ETD. Applying this workflow to HEK293T cells overexpressing the long-chain S-acylated proteins GNA13 and RhoB, we detected dual acylation states of GNA13 and observed both long-chain S-acylation and prenylation on RhoB. Our optimised analytical strategy facilitates the identification and analysis of long-chain S-acylation on proteins without the need for chemical derivatization by alkyne-tagged probes or acyl-biotin exchange. Although recombinant overexpression of the long-chain S-acylated proteins was still required for long-chain S-acylation detection, this direct analysis strategy for protein long-chain S-acylation enables the study of lipid modifications with lipid-specific resolution, laying a foundation for deeper insights into the regulatory roles of these hydrophobic modifications in protein function and cellular signalling.