Nontargeted in vitro metabolomics for high-throughput identification of novel enzymes in Escherichia coli
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Date
2017-02Type
- Journal Article
Citations
Cited 78 times in
Web of Science
Cited 94 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Our understanding of metabolism is limited by a lack of knowledge
about the functions of many enzymes. Here, we develop a
high-throughput mass spectrometry approach to comprehensively
profile proteins for in vitro enzymatic activity. Overexpressed
or purified proteins are incubated in a supplemented metabolome
extract containing hundreds of biologically relevant candidate
substrates, and accumulating and depleting metabolites are
determined by nontargeted mass spectrometry. By combining
chemometrics and database approaches, we established an automated
pipeline for unbiased annotation of the functions of novel
enzymes. In screening all 1,275 functionally uncharacterized
Escherichia coli proteins, we discovered 241 potential novel
enzymes, 12 of which we experimentally validated. Our
high-throughput in vitro metabolomics method is generally
applicable to any purified protein or crude cell lysate of its
overexpression host and enables performing up to 1,200
nontargeted enzyme assays per working day. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature MethodsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupOrganisational unit
08839 - Zamboni, Nicola (Tit.-Prof.)
03713 - Sauer, Uwe / Sauer, Uwe
More
Show all metadata
Citations
Cited 78 times in
Web of Science
Cited 94 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics