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High throughput characterization of combinatorial histone codes.

Young NL, DiMaggio PA, Plazas-Mayorca MD, Baliban RC, Floudas CA, Garcia BA

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 Oct; 8(10):2266-84

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Michael Washburn, Stowers Institute for Medical Research, MO, USA. F1000 Developmental Biology

19 Aug 2009 | New Finding, Technical Advance

Characterization of the combinatorial modifications of histone tails is an important area of research in proteomics and chromatin biology. Methods exist to carry out this analysis, but the Garcia group have developed a compelling chromatography-based approach using weak cation exchange and hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography to accelerate this line of research.

There is growing interest in analyzing the combinatorial modifications on histone tails, and methods have been developed to carry out this research. To date, however, these methods have been fairly time consuming. The Garcia group have developed a weak cation exchange-hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography method coupled to electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry to automate this process. They were able to reduce the amount of sample needed and were able to fully analyze a sample in 2 hours, both dramatic improvements over previous methods. In this study, they characterized human histone H3.2 and H4 from butyrate-treated cells and found more than 200 H3.2 forms and 70 H4 forms. This is an impressive development of an enabling technology in an important area of chromatin research.

Competing interests: None declared

Washburn M: "Characterization of the combinatorial modifications of histone tails is an important area of research in..." Evaluation of: [Young NL et al. High throughput characterization of combinatorial histone codes. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 Oct; 8(10):2266-84; doi: 10.1074/mcp.M900238-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 19 Aug 2009. F1000.com/1164285#eval625997

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Washburn M: 2009. F1000.com/1164285#eval625997

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Young NL et al. High throughput characterization of combinatorial histone codes. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2009 Oct; 8(10):2266-84; doi: 10.1074/mcp.M900238-MCP200]. Faculty of 1000, 19 Aug 2009. F1000.com/1164285

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Faculty of 1000: 2009. F1000.com/1164285

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We present a novel method utilizing "saltless" pH gradient weak cation exchange-hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography directly coupled to electron transfer dissociation (ETD) mass spectrometry for the automated on-line high throughput characterization of hypermodified combinatorial histone codes. This technique, performed on a low resolution mass spectrometer, displays an improvement over existing methods with an approximately 100-fold reduction in sample requirements and analysis time. The scheme presented is capable of identifying all of the major combinatorial histone codes present in a sample in a 2-h analysis. The large N-terminal histone peptides are eluted by the pH and organic solvent weak cation exchange-hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography gradient and directly introduced via nanoelectrospray ionization into a benchtop linear quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer equipped with ETD. Each polypeptide is sequenced, and the modification sites are identified by ETD fragmentation. The isobaric trimethyl and acetyl modifications are resolved chromatographically and confidently distinguished by the synthesis of mass spectrometric and chromatographic information. We demonstrate the utility of the method by complete characterization of human histone H3.2 and histone H4 from butyrate-treated cells, but it is generally applicable to the analysis of highly modified peptides. We find this methodology very useful for chromatographic separation of isomeric species that cannot be separated well by any other chromatographic means, leading to less complicated tandem mass spectra. The improved separation and increased sensitivity generated novel information about much less abundant forms. In this method demonstration we report over 200 H3.2 forms and 70 H4 forms, including forms not yet detected in human cells, such as the remarkably highly modified histone H3.2 K4me3K9acK14acK18acK23acK27acK36me3. Such detail provided by our proteomics platform will be essential for determining how histone modifications occur and act in combination to propagate the histone code during transcriptional events and could greatly enable sequencing of the histone component of human epigenomes.

DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M900238-MCP200

PMID: 19654425

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