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On the Feasibility of Using an Ultra-Fast DirectMS1 Method of Proteome-Wide Analysis for Searching Drug Targets in Chemical Proteomics


Elizaveta M. Solovyeva1, Julia A. Bubis1, Irina A. Tarasova1, Anna A. Lobas1, Mark V. Ivanov1, Alexey A. Nazarov2, Ilya A. Shutkov2, and Mikhail V. Gorshkov1,a*

1V. L. Talrose Institute for Energy Problems of Chemical Physics, N. N. Semenov Federal Research Center for Chemical Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, 119334 Moscow, Russia

2Faculty of Chemistry, Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119991 Moscow, Russia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Received June 16, 2022; Revised September 20, 2022; Accepted October 3, 2022
Protein quantitation in tissue cells or physiological fluids based on liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry is one of the key sources of information on the mechanisms of cell functioning during chemotherapeutic treatment. Information on significant changes in protein expression upon treatment can be obtained by chemical proteomics and requires analysis of the cellular proteomes, as well as development of experimental and bioinformatic methods for identification of the drug targets. Low throughput of whole proteome analysis based on liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry is one of the main factors limiting the scale of these studies. The method of direct mass spectrometric identification of proteins, DirectMS1, is one of the approaches developed in recent years allowing ultrafast proteome-wide analyses employing minute-scale gradients for separation of proteolytic mixtures. Aim of this work was evaluation of both possibilities and limitations of the method for identification of drug targets at the level of whole proteome and for revealing cellular processes activated by the treatment. Particularly, the available literature data on chemical proteomics obtained earlier for a large set of onco-pharmaceuticals using multiplex quantitative proteome profiling were analyzed. The results obtained were further compared with the proteome-wide data acquired by the DirectMS1 method using ultrashort separation gradients to evaluate efficiency of the method in identifying known drug targets. Using ovarian cancer cell line A2780 as an example, a whole-proteome comparison of two cell lysis techniques was performed, including the freeze-thaw lysis commonly employed in chemical proteomics and the one based on ultrasonication for cell disruption, which is the widely accepted as a standard in proteomic studies. Also, the proteome-wide profiling was performed using ultrafast DirectMS1 method for A2780 cell line treated with lonidamine, followed by gene ontology analyses to evaluate capabilities of the method in revealing regulation of proteins in the cellular processes associated with drug treatment.
KEY WORDS: proteomics, mass spectrometry, proteins, lonidamine, lysis, signaling pathways

DOI: 10.1134/S000629792211013X