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Dive into the research topics where Yangjun Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Yangjun Zhang.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2008

Enrichment of Phosphopeptides by Fe3+-Immobilized Magnetic Nanoparticles for Phosphoproteome Analysis of the Plasma Membrane of Mouse Liver

Feng Tan; Yangjun Zhang; Wei Mi; Jinglan Wang; Junying Wei; Yun Cai; Xiaohong Qian

Immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) is a commonly used technique for phosphoprotein analysis due to its specific affinity for phosphopeptides. In this study, Fe3+-immobilized magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3+-IMAN) with an average diameter of 15 nm were synthesized and applied to enrich phosphopeptides. Compared with commercial microscale IMAC beads, Fe3+-IMAN has a larger surface area and better dispersibility in buffer solutions which improved the specific interaction with phosphopeptides. Using tryptic digests of the phosphoprotein alpha-casein as a model sample, the number and signal-to-noise ratios of the phosphopeptides identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS) following Fe3+-IMAN enrichment greatly increased relative to results obtained with direct MALDI-TOFMS analysis. The lowest detectable concentration is 5 x 10(-11) M for 100 microL of pure standard phosphopeptide (FLTEpYVATR) following Fe3+-IMAN enrichment. We presented a phosphopeptide enrichment scheme using simple Fe3+-IMAN and also a combined approach of strong cation exchange chromatography and Fe3+-IMAN for phosphoproteome analysis of the plasma membrane of mouse liver. In total, 217 unique phosphorylation sites corresponding to 158 phosphoproteins were identified by nano-LC-MS/MS. This efficient approach will be very useful in large-scale phosphoproteome analysis.


Proteomics | 2004

Proteomic analysis on structural proteins of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus

Wantao Ying; Yunwei Hao; Yangjun Zhang; Wenming Peng; E-De Qin; Yun Cai; Kaihua Wei; Jie Wang; Guohui Chang; Wei Sun; Shujia Dai; Xiaohai Li; Yunping Zhu; Jianqi Li; Songfeng Wu; Lihai Guo; Jingquan Dai; Jinglan Wang; Ping Wan; Tinggui Chen; Chunjuan Du; Dong Li; Jia Wan; Xuezhang Kuai; Weihua Li; Rong Shi; Handong Wei; Cheng Cao; Man Yu; Liu H

Recently, a new coronavirus was isolated from the lung tissue of autopsy sample and nasal/throat swabs of the patients with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and the causative association with SARS was determined. To reveal further the characteristics of the virus and to provide insight about the molecular mechanism of SARS etiology, a proteomic strategy was utilized to identify the structural proteins of SARS coronavirus (SARS‐CoV) isolated from Vero E6 cells infected with the BJ‐01 strain of the virus. At first, Western blotting with the convalescent sera from SARS patients demonstrated that there were various structural proteins of SARS‐CoV in the cultured supernatant of virus infected‐Vero E6 cells and that nucleocaspid (N) protein had a prominent immunogenicity to the convalescent sera from the patients with SARS, while the immune response of spike (S) protein probably binding with membrane (M) glycoprotein was much weaker. Then, sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS‐PAGE) was used to separate the complex protein constituents, and the strategy of continuous slicing from loading well to the bottom of the gels was utilized to search thoroughly the structural proteins of the virus. The proteins in sliced slots were trypsinized in‐gel and identified by mass spectrometry. Three structural proteins named S, N and M proteins of SARS‐CoV were uncovered with the sequence coverage of 38.9, 93.1 and 28.1% respectively. Glycosylation modification in S protein was also analyzed and four glycosylation sites were discovered by comparing the mass spectra before and after deglycosylation of the peptides with PNGase F digestion. Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization‐mass spectrometry determination showed that relative molecular weight of intact N protein is 45 929 Da, which is very close to its theoretically calculated molecular weight 45 935 Da based on the amino acid sequence deduced from the genome with the first amino acid methionine at the N‐terminus depleted and second, serine, acetylated, indicating that phosphorylation does not happen at all in the predicted phosphorylation sites within infected cells nor in virus particles. Intriguingly, a series of shorter isoforms of N protein was observed by SDS‐PAGE and identified by mass spectrometry characterization. For further confirmation of this phenomenon and its related mechanism, recombinant N protein of SARS‐CoV was cleaved in vitro by caspase‐3 and ‐6 respectively. The results demonstrated that these shorter isoforms could be the products from cleavage of caspase‐3 rather than that of caspase‐6. Further, the relationship between the caspase cleavage and the viral infection to the host cell is discussed.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

A Fast Workflow for Identification and Quantification of Proteomes

Jing Jiang; Junying Wei; Wanlin Liu; Wei Zhang; Mingwei Liu; Tianyi Fu; Tianyuan Lu; Lei Song; Wantao Ying; Cheng Chang; Yangjun Zhang; Jie Ma; Lai Wei; Anna Malovannaya; Lijun Jia; Bei Zhen; Yi Wang; Fuchu He; Xiaohong Qian; Jun Qin

The current in-depth proteomics makes use of long chromatography gradient to get access to more peptides for protein identification, resulting in covering of as many as 8000 mammalian gene products in 3 days of mass spectrometer running time. Here we report a fast sequencing (Fast-seq) workflow of the use of dual reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS) with a short gradient to achieve the same proteome coverage in 0.5 day. We adapted this workflow to a quantitative version (Fast quantification, Fast-quan) that was compatible to large-scale protein quantification. We subjected two identical samples to the Fast-quan workflow, which allowed us to systematically evaluate different parameters that impact the sensitivity and accuracy of the workflow. Using the statistics of significant test, we unraveled the existence of substantial falsely quantified differential proteins and estimated correlation of false quantification rate and parameters that are applied in label-free quantification. We optimized the setting of parameters that may substantially minimize the rate of falsely quantified differential proteins, and further applied them on a real biological process. With improved efficiency and throughput, we expect that the Fast-seq/Fast-quan workflow, allowing pair wise comparison of two proteomes in 1 day may make MS available to the masses and impact biomedical research in a positive way.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2008

Highly efficient enrichment of phosphopeptides by magnetic nanoparticles coated with zirconium phosphonate for phosphoproteome analysis

Junying Wei; Yangjun Zhang; Jinglan Wang; Feng Tan; Jinfeng Liu; Yun Cai; Xiaohong Qian

The location of phosphorylation plays a vital role for the elucidation of biological processes. The challenge of low stoichiometry of phosphoproteins and signal suppression of phosphopeptides by nonphosphopeptides in mass spectrometry (MS) analysis makes the selective enrichment of phosphopeptides prior to MS analysis necessary. Besides the immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) method, some affinity methods based on nanoparticles displayed a higher enrichment efficiency for phosphopeptides such as Fe(3)O(4)/TiO2 and Fe(3)O(4)/ZrO(2) nanoparticles. To further improve the selectivity and compatibility of the affinity methods, a novel strategy based on magnetic nanoparticles coated with zirconium phosphonate for the enrichment of phosphopeptides has been developed in this study. Under optimized experimental conditions, 1 x 10(-9) M phosphopeptides in 50 microL tryptic digest of beta-casein could be enriched and identified successfully. Reliable results were also obtained for 1 x 10(-8) M phosphopeptides in 50 microL tryptic digest of beta-casein in the presence of nonphosphopeptides from a tryptic digest of bovine serum albumin (BSA) over 20 times in concentration. The performance of nanoparticles for use in a real sample was further demonstrated by employing the strong cation-exchange chromatography (SCX) fraction of a tryptic digest of a protein extract from Chang liver cells as a model sample. Experimental results show that the nanoparticles can be easily and effectively used for enrichment of phosphopeptides in low concentration. Most importantly, our approach is more compatible with commonly used SCX strategies than Fe(3+)-IMAC. The proposed method thus has great potential for future studies of large-scale phosphoproteomes.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2006

A Dataset of Human Fetal Liver Proteome Identified by Subcellular Fractionation and Multiple Protein Separation and Identification Technology

Wantao Ying; Ying Jiang; Lihai Guo; Yunwei Hao; Yangjun Zhang; Songfeng Wu; Fan Zhong; Jinglan Wang; Rong Shi; Dong Li; Ping Wan; Xiaohai Li; Handong Wei; Jianqi Li; Zhongsheng Wang; Xiaofang Xue; Yun Cai; Yunping Zhu; Xiaohong Qian; Fuchu He

A high throughput process including subcellular fractionation and multiple protein separation and identification technology allowed us to establish the protein expression profile of human fetal liver, which was composed of at least 2,495 distinct proteins and 568 non-isoform groups identified from 64,960 peptides and 24,454 distinct peptides. In addition to the basic protein identification mentioned above, the MS data were used for complementary identification and novel protein mining. By doing the analysis with integrated protein, expressed sequence tag, and genome datasets, 223 proteins and 15 peptides were complementarily identified with high quality MS/MS data.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Combination of Improved 18O Incorporation and Multiple Reaction Monitoring: A Universal Strategy for Absolute Quantitative Verification of Serum Candidate Biomarkers of Liver Cancer

Yan Zhao; Wei Jia; Wei Sun; Wenhai Jin; Lihai Guo; Junying Wei; Wantao Ying; Yangjun Zhang; Yongming Xie; Ying Jiang; Fuchu He; Xiaohong Qian

Stable isotope dilution-multiple reaction monitoring-mass spectrometry (SID-MRM-MS), which is an alternative to immunoassay methods such as ELISA and Western blotting, has been used to alleviate the bottlenecks of high-throughput verification of biomarker candidates recently. However, the inconvenience and high isotope consumption required to obtain stably labeled peptide impedes the broad application of this method. In our study, the (18)O-labeling method was introduced to generate stable isotope-labeled peptides instead of the Fmoc chemical synthesis and Qconcat recombinant protein synthesis methods. To make (18)O-labeling suitable for absolute quantification, we have added the following procedures: (1) RapiGest SF and microwave heating were added to increase the labeling efficiency; (2) trypsin was deactivated completely by chemical modification using tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) and iodoacetamide (IAA) to prevent back-exchange of (18)O to (16)O, and (3) MRM parameters were optimized to maximize specificity and better distinguish between (18)O-labeled and unlabeled peptides. As a result, the (18)O-labeled peptides can be prepared in less than 1 h with satisfactory efficiency (>97%) and remained stable for 1 week, compared to traditional protocols that require 5 h for labeling with poor stability. Excellent separation of (18)O-labeled and unlabeled peptides was achieved by the MRM-MS spectrum. Finally, through the combined improvement in (18)O-labeling with multiple reaction monitoring, an absolute quantification strategy was developed to quantitatively verify hepatocellular carcinoma-related biomarker candidates, namely, vitronectin and clusterin, in undepleted serum samples. Sample preparation and capillary-HPLC analysis were optimized for high-throughput applications. The reliability of this strategy was further evaluated by method validation, with accuracy (%RE) and precision (%RSD) of less than 20% and good linearity (r(2) > 0.99), and clinical validation, which were consistent with previously reported results. In summary, our strategy can promote broader application of SID-MRM-MS for biomarkers from discovery to verification regarding the significant advantages of the convenient and flexible generation of internal standards, the reduction in the sample labeling steps, and the simple transition.


Chinese Journal of Chromatography | 2008

Rapid determination of volatile flavor components in soy sauce using head space solid-phase microextraction and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

Yan L; Yangjun Zhang; Tao W; Wang L; Wu S

A rapid and simple method was developed for the determination of volatile flavor compounds (VFCs) in soy sauce by head space solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) coupled to capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Five types of SPME fibers, including 85 microm PA, 100 microm PDMS, 75 microm CAR/PDMS, 65 microm PDMS/DVB, 50 microm DVB/CAR/PDMS were investigated. Three parameters for HS-SPME in terms of adsorption time, salt concentration, and extraction temperature were optimized. Adsorption time tested in this study were 20, 40 and 60 minutes; the salt concentrations were 180, 210, 250, 270 and 300 g/L; and extraction temperatures were 25, 35, 45, 55 and 65 degrees C. The concentrations of the compounds were calculated based on their relative peak areas to the internal standard of 2-octanol. An 85 microm PA fiber, adsorption time of 40 min, a temperature of 45 degrees C and NaCl concentration of 250 g/L were selected as th optimum conditions. This optimized method was applied to evaluate a real sample. As a result, 97 compounds in a soy sauce sample were isolated and identified successfully. The results showed that alcohols, carboxylic acids, esters and phenols were the major VFCs of soy sauce. The most important groups of volatile compounds in the soy sauce sample were ethanol, hexadecanoic acid, phenylethyl alcohol and 2,3-butanediol. In addition, some oxo-compounds and heterocyclic compounds were also found. The average relative standard deviation of the relative peak area was 12.1%, and the recoveries were 79.9% - 109.6%. The method is simple, fast and accurate with high reproducibility, high sensitivity and low cost.


Carcinogenesis | 2013

Annexin A2 is a discriminative serological candidate in early hepatocellular carcinoma

Yu-Lin Sun; Guangzhou Gao; Jianqiang Cai; Youliang Wang; Xiuhua Qu; Lidong He; Fang Liu; Yangjun Zhang; Kai-Xuan Lin; Shouzhi Ma; Xiao Yang; Xiaohong Qian; Xiaohang Zhao

To date, the useful markers of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains incompletely developed. Here, we show that annexin A2 complement alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), a widely used liver cancer marker, in the serologically surveillance and early detection of HCC. First, differentially expressed proteins in HCC were identified using a subcellular proteomic approach. Annexin A2 was then selected for further verification. It was found to be overexpressed in HCC tissues (60.7%, 136/224). Using a self-estabished sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, we found that annexin A2 significantly increased in the sera of HCC (n = 175, median, 24.75ng/µl) compared with the healthy (n = 49, median, 16.69ng/µl), benign tumors (n = 19, median, 19.92ng/µl), hepatitis (n = 23, median, 6.48ng/µl) and cirrhosis (n = 51, median, 7.39ng/µl) controls and other malignant tumors (n = 87). Importantly, raised concentrations of annexin A2 were observed in 83.2% (79/95) of early stage (median, 24.32ng/µl) and 78.4% (58/74) of AFP-negative (median, 24.09ng/µl) patients. Annexin A2 alone had a better area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC = 0.79, 95% confidence interval: 0.73–0.85) in comparison with AFP (AUC = 0.73, 95% confidence interval: 0.66–0.80) in detecting of early stage HCC. Combining both markers notably improved the diagnostic efficiency of early HCC with an achieved sensitivity of 87.4%. Additionally, the expression characteristics of annexin A2 during hepatocarcinogenesis were detected in p21-HBx gene knockin transgenic mice model. The results showed that annexin A2 expression was substantially elevated in HCC-bearing mice, in accordance with the finding in human samples. In conclusion, annexin A2 may be an independent serological candidate for hepatitis B virus–related HCC, especially in the early stage cases with normal serum AFP.


Proteomics | 2009

A rapid isolation and identification method for blocked N-terminal peptides by isothiocyanate-coupled magnetic nanoparticles and MS.

Liyan Zhao; Yangjun Zhang; Junying Wei; Dong Cao; Kehui Liu; Xiaohong Qian

A quick isolation and identification of N‐blocked peptides from protein digest mixtures were achieved by diisothiocyanate or isothiocyanate‐coupled magnetic nanoparticles and MS. After protein digests were guanidinated and then mixed with diisothiocyanate or isothiocyanate‐coupled magnetic nanoparticles, unmodified N‐terminal peptides were covalently bound to magnetic nanoparticles, and can be removed from the mixture under magnetic field. Therefore, N‐blocked peptides could be isolated and analyzed by MALDI or ESI MS. This new strategy was demonstrated with model peptides, proteins, and the lysates of HepG2 cells.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2009

Application of open tubular capillary columns coated with zirconium phosphonate for enrichment of phosphopeptides.

Yanfeng Xue; Junying Wei; Huanhuan Han; Liyan Zhao; Dong Cao; Jinglan Wang; Xiaoming Yang; Yangjun Zhang; Xiaohong Qian

A new approach utilizing open tubular capillary columns coated with zirconium phosphonate (ZrP-OTCC) for enrichment of phosphopeptides is described. The experimental conditions: interior diameter, length of capillary and flow rate was optimized using tryptic digest of alpha-casein (a phosphoprotein) as a model sample. The ZrP-OTCC was demonstrated to tolerate urea, sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), and NaCl. Further experimental results show that the ZrP-OTCC can trap the phosphopeptides even at the concentration of alpha-casein as low as 10(-8)M. This column has also been successfully coupled online with nano-liquid chromatography for enrichment and then separation of phosphopeptides from a complex sample, and finally analyzed the phosphopeptides by mass spectrometry (MS).

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Xiaohong Qian

Capital Medical University

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Jinglan Wang

University of Wollongong

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Junying Wei

Beijing Institute of Technology

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Wantao Ying

Capital Medical University

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Feng Tan

Dalian University of Technology

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Bing Yang

Shenyang Pharmaceutical University

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Songfeng Wu

Capital Medical University

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Dong Cao

Beijing Institute of Technology

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