Fetal Sığır Serum Asetilkolinesterazının Tetramerik Yapısını Organize Eden Poliprolin Peptidlerin Kütle Spektrometre ile Analizi
Abstract
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in the serum of fetal bovine is a tetrameric
enzyme. The related enzyme, butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), in the sera of humans
and horse requires polyproline peptides for assembly into tetramers. The goal of this
study was to determine whether soluble tetrameric AChE includes tetramer
organizing peptides in its structure. In this study, fetal bovine serum AChE was
denatured by boiling to release non-covalently bound peptides. Released peptides
were separated from bulk protein by filtration and by high performance liquid
chromatography. Peptide mass and amino acid sequence of the released peptides
were determined by MALDI–TOF–TOF and LTQ-Orbitrap mass spectrometry.
Fourteen polyproline peptides, divided into 5 families, were identified. The longest
peptide contained 25 consecutive prolines and no other amino acid. Other
polyproline peptides included one nonproline amino acid. A search of the
mammalian proteome database suggested that this assortment of polyproline peptides
originated from at least 5 different precursor proteins, none of which were the ColQ
or PRiMA of membrane-anchored AChE. To date, AChE and BChE are the only
proteins known that include polyproline tetramer organizing peptides in their
tetrameric structure.