Proteolytic Fingerprinting of Complex Biological Samples Using Combinatorial Libraries of Fluorogenic Probes

Citation

Jambunathan, K., Watson, D. S., Kodukula, K., & Galande, A. K. (2012). Proteolytic fingerprinting of complex biological samples using combinatorial libraries of fluorogenic probes. Current Protocols in Protein Science, 70(1), 21-22.

Abstract

Proteases have garnered interest as candidate biomarkers and therapeutic targets for many human diseases. A key challenge is the identification and characterization of disease-relevant proteases in the complex milieu of biological fluids such as serum, plasma, and bronchoalveolar lavage, in which a multitude of hydrolases act in concert. This unit describes a protocol to map the global proteolytic substrate specificities of complex biological samples using a concise combinatorial library of internally quenched fluorogenic peptide probes (IQFPs). This substrate profiling approach provides a global and quantitative comparison of protease specificities between different biological samples. Such a comparative analysis can lead to the identification of disease-specific ‘fingerprints’ of proteolytic activities with potential utility in diagnosis and therapy. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 70:21.22.1-21.22.14. © 2012 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.


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