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Dive into the research topics where Chad R. Borges is active.

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Featured researches published by Chad R. Borges.


Clinical Chemistry | 2010

Selected Reaction Monitoring–Mass Spectrometric Immunoassay Responsive to Parathyroid Hormone and Related Variants

Mary F. Lopez; Taha Rezai; David Sarracino; Amol Prakash; Bryan Krastins; Michael Athanas; Ravinder J. Singh; David R. Barnidge; Paul E. Oran; Chad R. Borges; Randall W. Nelson

BACKGROUND Parathyroid hormone (PTH) assays able to distinguish between full-length PTH (PTH1-84) and N-terminally truncated PTH (PTH7-84) are of increasing significance in the accurate diagnosis of endocrine and osteological diseases. We describe the discovery of new N-terminal and C-terminal PTH variants and the development of selected reaction monitoring (SRM)-based immunoassays specifically designed for the detection of full-length PTH [amino acid (aa)1-84] and 2 N-terminal variants, aa7-84 and aa34-84. METHODS Preparation of mass spectrometric immunoassay pipettor tips and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometric analysis were carried out as previously described. We used novel software to develop SRM assays on a triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer. Heavy isotope-labeled versions of target peptides were used as internal standards. RESULTS Top-down analysis of samples from healthy individuals and renal failure patients revealed numerous PTH variants, including previously unidentified aa28-84, aa48-84, aa34-77, aa37-77, and aa38-77. Quantitative SRM assays were developed for PTH1-84, PTH7-84, and variant aa34-84. Peptides exhibited linear responses (R(2) = 0.90-0.99) relative to recombinant human PTH concentration limits of detection for intact PTH of 8 ng/L and limits of quantification of 16-31 ng/L depending on the peptide. Standard error of analysis for all triplicate measurements was 3%-12% for all peptides, with <5% chromatographic drift between replicates. The CVs of integrated areas under the curve for 54 separate measurements of heavy peptides were 5%-9%. CONCLUSIONS Mass spectrometric immunoassays identified new clinical variants of PTH and provided a quantitative assay for these and previously identified forms of PTH.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Dopamine biosynthesis is regulated by S-glutathionylation. Potential mechanism of tyrosine hydroxylase inhibition during oxidative stress

Chad R. Borges; Timothy J. Geddes; J. Throck Watson; Donald M. Kuhn

Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter dopamine, is inhibited by the sulfhydryl oxidant diamide in a concentration-dependent manner. The inhibitory effect of diamide on TH catalytic activity is enhanced significantly by GSH. Treatment of TH with diamide in the presence of [35S]GSH results in the incorporation of35S into the enzyme. The effect of diamide-GSH on TH activity is prevented by dithiothreitol (DTT), as is the binding of [35S]GSH, indicating the formation of a disulfide linkage between GSH and TH protein cysteinyls. Loss of TH catalytic activity caused by diamide-GSH is partially recovered by DTT and glutaredoxin, whereas the disulfide linkage of GSH with TH is completely reversed by both. Treatment of intact PC12 cells with diamide results in a concentration-dependent inhibition of TH activity. Incubation of cells with [35S]cysteine, to label cellular GSH prior to diamide treatment, followed by immunoprecipitation of TH shows that the loss of TH catalytic activity is associated with a DTT-reversible incorporation of [35S]GSH into the enzyme. A combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization/mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify the sites of S-glutathionylation in TH. Six cysteines (177, 249, 263, 329, 330, and 380) of the seven cysteine residues in TH were confirmed as substrates for modification. Only Cys-311 was notS-glutathionylated. These results establish that TH activity is influenced in a reversible manner byS-glutathionylation and suggest that cellular GSH may regulate dopamine biosynthesis under conditions of oxidative stress or drug-induced toxicity.


Biochemistry | 2010

Cysteine sulfenic acid as an intermediate in disulfide bond formation and nonenzymatic protein folding.

Douglas S. Rehder; Chad R. Borges

As a posttranslational protein modification, cysteine sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH) is well established as an oxidative stress-induced mediator of enzyme function and redox signaling. Data presented herein show that protein Cys-SOH forms spontaneously in air-exposed aqueous solutions of unfolded (disulfide-reduced) protein in the absence of added oxidizing reagents, mediating the oxidative disulfide bond formation process key to in vitro, nonenzymatic protein folding. Molecular oxygen (O(2)) and trace metals [e.g., copper(II)] are shown to be important reagents in the oxidative refolding process. Cys-SOH is also shown to play a role in spontaneous disulfide-based dimerization of peptide molecules containing free cysteine residues. In total, the data presented expose a chemically ubiquitous role for Cys-SOH in solutions of free cysteine-containing protein exposed to air.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2014

Single-molecule spectroscopy of amino acids and peptides by recognition tunnelling

Yanan Zhao; Brian Ashcroft; Peiming Zhang; Hao Liu; Suman Sen; Weisi Song; JongOne Im; Brett Gyarfas; Saikat Manna; Sovan Biswas; Chad R. Borges; Stuart Lindsay

The human proteome has millions of protein variants due to alternative RNA splicing and post-translational modifications, and variants that are related to diseases are frequently present in minute concentrations. For DNA and RNA, low concentrations can be amplified using the polymerase chain reaction, but there is no such reaction for proteins. Therefore, the development of single molecule protein sequencing is a critical step in the search for protein biomarkers. Here we show that single amino acids can be identified by trapping the molecules between two electrodes that are coated with a layer of recognition molecules and measuring the electron tunneling current across the junction. A given molecule can bind in more than one way in the junction, and we therefore use a machine-learning algorithm to distinguish between the sets of electronic ‘fingerprints’ associated with each binding motif. With this recognition tunneling technique, we are able to identify D, L enantiomers, a methylated amino acid, isobaric isomers, and short peptides. The results suggest that direct electronic sequencing of single proteins could be possible by sequentially measuring the products of processive exopeptidase digestion, or by using a molecular motor to pull proteins through a tunnel junction integrated with a nanopore.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2008

Population studies of Vitamin D Binding Protein microheterogeneity by mass spectrometry lead to characterization of its genotype-dependent O-glycosylation patterns.

Chad R. Borges; Jason W. Jarvis; Paul E. Oran; Randall W. Nelson

Mass spectrometric evidence presented here characterizes the genotype-dependent glycosylation patterns for each of the three major allele products of Vitamin D Binding Protein found in the general human population. Findings based on the analysis of over 100 individual plasma samples demonstrated that all DBP allele products, except GC*2, are modified (10-25 mol%) with a linear (NeuNAc) 1(Gal) 1(GalNAc) 1 trisaccharide and, to a much lesser extent (1-5 mol%) with a trisaccharide-independent (Gal) 1(GalNAc) 1 dissaccharide. GC*2 protein contains the disaccharide but remains completely free of the trisaccharide, even in heterozygous individuals possessing a second gene product that is modified with the trisaccharide. Thus, all allelic forms of DBP except GC*2 possess two independent O-glycosylation sites occupied by separate, yet consistently isomass oligosaccharides and, despite a consensus sequence, lack N-glycosylation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

RNA–protein binding interface in the telomerase ribonucleoprotein

Christopher J. Bley; Xiaodong Qi; Dustin P. Rand; Chad R. Borges; Randall W. Nelson; Julian J.-L. Chen

Telomerase is a specialized reverse transcriptase containing an intrinsic telomerase RNA (TR) which provides the template for telomeric DNA synthesis. Distinct from conventional reverse transcriptases, telomerase has evolved a unique TR-binding domain (TRBD) in the catalytic telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) protein, integral for ribonucleoprotein assembly. Two structural elements in the vertebrate TR, the pseudoknot and CR4/5, bind TERT independently and are essential for telomerase enzymatic activity. However, the details of the TR–TERT interaction have remained elusive. In this study, we employed a photoaffinity cross-linking approach to map the CR4/5-TRBD RNA–protein binding interface by identifying RNA and protein residues in close proximity. Photoreactive 5-iodouridines were incorporated into the medaka CR4/5 RNA fragment and UV cross-linked to the medaka TRBD protein fragment. The cross-linking RNA residues were identified by alkaline partial hydrolysis and cross-linked protein residues were identified by mass spectrometry. Three CR4/5 RNA residues (U182, U187, and U205) were found cross-linking to TRBD amino acids Tyr503, Phe355, and Trp477, respectively. This CR4/5 binding pocket is distinct and separate from the previously proposed T pocket in the Tetrahymena TRBD. Based on homologous structural models, our cross-linking data position the essential loop L6.1 adjacent to the TERT C-terminal extension domain. We thus propose that stem-loop 6.1 facilitates proper TERT folding by interacting with both TRBD and C-terminal extension. Revealing the telomerase CR4/5-TRBD binding interface with single-residue resolution provides important insights into telomerase ribonucleoprotein architecture and the function of the essential CR4/5 domain.


Proteomics Clinical Applications | 2013

Mass spectrometric immunoassay and MRM as targeted MS-based quantitative approaches in biomarker development: Potential applications to cardiovascular disease and diabetes

Hussein N. Yassine; Chad R. Borges; Matthew R. Schaab; Dean Billheimer; Craig S. Stump; Serrine S. Lau; Randall W. Nelson

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is an important risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD)—the leading cause of death in the United States. Yet not all subjects with T2DM are at equal risk for CVD complications; the challenge lies in identifying those at greatest risk. Therapies directed toward treating conventional risk factors have failed to significantly reduce this residual risk in T2DM patients. Thus newer targets and markers are needed for the development and testing of novel therapies. Herein we review two complementary MS‐based approaches—mass spectrometric immunoassay (MSIA) and MS/MS as MRM—for the analysis of plasma proteins and PTMs of relevance to T2DM and CVD. Together, these complementary approaches allow for high‐throughput monitoring of many PTMs and the absolute quantification of proteins near the low picomolar range. In this review article, we discuss the clinical relevance of the high density lipoprotein (HDL) proteome and Apolipoprotein A‐I PTMs to T2DM and CVD as well as provide illustrative MSIA and MRM data on HDL proteins from T2DM patients to provide examples of how these MS approaches can be applied to gain new insight regarding cardiovascular risk factors. Also discussed are the reproducibility, interpretation, and limitations of each technique with an emphasis on their capacities to facilitate the translation of new biomarkers into clinical practice.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011

Mass Spectrometric Immunoassay Revisited

Randall W. Nelson; Chad R. Borges

The progressive understanding and improvement of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS), realized over the years through the considerable efforts of Dr. Marvin Vestal, have made possible numerous comparable efforts involving its application in the biological sciences. Here we revisit the concepts behind one such analytical approach, Mass Spectrometric Immunoassay, which is designed to selectively detect and quantify proteins present in biological milieu.


Protein Science | 2009

Glycosylation status of vitamin D binding protein in cancer patients

Douglas S. Rehder; Randall W. Nelson; Chad R. Borges

On the basis of the results of activity studies, previous reports have suggested that vitamin D binding protein (DBP) is significantly or even completely deglycosylated in cancer patients, eliminating the molecular precursor of the immunologically important Gc macrophage activating factor (GcMAF), a glycosidase‐derived product of DBP. The purpose of this investigation was to directly determine the relative degree of O‐linked trisaccharide glycosylation of serum‐derived DBP in human breast, colorectal, pancreatic, and prostate cancer patients. Results obtained by electrospray ionization‐based mass spectrometric immunoassay showed that there was no significant depletion of DBP trisaccharide glycosylation in the 56 cancer patients examined relative to healthy controls. These results suggest that alternative hypotheses regarding the molecular and/or structural origins of GcMAF must be considered to explain the relative inability of cancer patient serum to activate macrophages.


Proteomics Clinical Applications | 2011

Mass spectrometric immunoassay of intact insulin and related variants for population proteomics studies.

Paul E. Oran; Jason W. Jarvis; Chad R. Borges; Nisha D. Sherma; Randall W. Nelson

Purpose: The purpose of the work presented herein was to develop a high‐throughput assay for the quantification of human insulin in plasma samples while simultaneously detecting, with high mass accuracy, any additional variant forms of insulin that might be present in each sample.

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Paul E. Oran

Arizona State University

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Hussein N. Yassine

University of Southern California

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