A High‐Throughput Absolute Quantification of Protein‐Bound Sulfur Amino Acids from Model and Crop Plant Seeds
Abou Yobi, Huda Ansaf, Ruthie Angelovici- Medical Laboratory Technology
- Health Informatics
- General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics
- General Immunology and Microbiology
- General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
- General Neuroscience
Abstract
In this procedure, we describe a high‐throughput absolute quantification protocol for the protein‐bound sulfur amino acids, cysteine (Cys) and methionine (Met), from plant seeds. This procedure consists of performic acid oxidation that transforms bound Cys into cysteic acid (CysA) and bound Met into methionine sulfone (MetS) followed by acid hydrolysis. The absolute quantification step is performed by multiple reaction monitoring tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS). The approach facilitates the analysis of a few hundred samples per week by using a 96‐well plate extraction setup. Importantly, the method uses only ∼4 mg of tissue per sample and uses the common acid hydrolysis protocol, followed by water extraction that includes DL‐Ser‐d3 and L‐Met‐d3 as internal standards to enable the quantification of the absolute levels of the protein‐bound Cys and Met with high precision, accuracy, and reproducibility. The protocol described herein has been optimized for seed samples from Arabidopsis thaliana, Glycine max, and Zea mays but could be applied to other plant tissues. © 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
Basic Protocol: Analysis of protein‐bound cysteine and methionine from seeds