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0 Q&A 2561 Views Oct 20, 2025

Recent advances in single-cell technologies have provided limited insight into the role of protein phosphorylation in T-cell fate and function. Dysregulated protein phosphorylation is associated with adverse clinical outcomes, emphasizing the need for reliable methods to unravel the complexities of T-cell signal transduction and disease-related alterations. While flow cytometry is widely used, it is constrained by spectral overlap, limiting the number of protein targets for simultaneous analysis. To overcome this, we present a robust protocol for whole blood T-cell stimulation and subsequent analysis using mass cytometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF). CyTOF minimizes spillover into adjacent channels by employing highly pure, stable, heavy metal–conjugated antibodies for protein detection. This protocol offers a high-dimensional approach for phenotypic and phospho-protein characterization of key signaling pathways, including JAK/STAT, MAPK, PI3K/mTOR, PKC, and NF-κB. A key feature is the T-cell stimulation reagent, which mimics endogenous activation by engaging the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex and providing co-stimulation via an anti-CD28 antibody. Further, we enhance reproducibility and enable batch processing through the implementation of the Prot1/Thaw-Lyse system for immediate cryopreservation of stimulated blood samples. By employing CyTOF, this method permits the simultaneous analysis of 31 protein targets with single-cell resolution, minimizing spillover and providing superior specificity, sensitivity, and resolution over flow cytometric methods. This approach facilitates the robust assessment of TCR activation and its effect on bystander populations, which has been challenging with spectral flow cytometry due to the limited availability of methanol-resistant fluorophores. This protocol is a precise and reproducible method for elucidating the downstream effects of T-cell stimulation and immune status, with significant potential for clinical applications, including the assessment of T-cell-targeted therapies.

0 Q&A 3452 Views Feb 5, 2022

Cells sense and respond to mitogens by activating a cascade of signaling events, primarily mediated by tyrosine phosphorylation (pY). Because of its key roles in cellular homeostasis, deregulation of this signaling is often linked to oncogenesis. To understand the mechanisms underlying these signaling pathway aberrations, it is necessary to quantify tyrosine phosphorylation on a global scale in cancer cell models. However, the majority of the protein phosphorylation events occur on serine (86%) and threonine (12%) residues, whereas only 2% of phosphorylation events occur on tyrosine residues (Olsen et al., 2006). The low stoichiometry of tyrosine phosphorylation renders it difficult to quantify cellular pY events comprehensively with high mass accuracy and reproducibility. Here, we describe a detailed protocol for isolating and quantifying tyrosine phosphorylated peptides from drug-perturbed, growth factor-stimulated cancer cells, using immunoaffinity purification and tandem mass tags (TMT) coupled with mass spectrometry.


0 Q&A 9493 Views Jul 20, 2015
Protein phosphorylation is one of the most common post-translational modifications in eukaryotic cells and plays a critical role in a vast array of cellular processes. Efficient methods of protein extraction and phosphopeptide purification are required to ensure the detection of high quality of proteins. In our hands, phenol extraction of proteins and TiO2 chromatography enrich phosphorylated peptides more efficiently than other methods in the moss Physcomitrlla patens (P. patens).



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