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  6. Quantifying protein homodimer affinities and the effect of molecular glues and interface residues using native mass spectrometry
 
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Title(s)
TitleLanguage
Quantifying protein homodimer affinities and the effect of molecular glues and interface residues using native mass spectrometry
en
 
Author(s)
NameORCIDGNDAffiliation
Schulte, Jonathan 
0000-0003-0675-7357
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry 
Schwegler, Eric
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena 
Morgner, Nina
0000-0002-1872-490X
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry 
Hellmich, Ute
0000-0001-7162-285X
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena 
 
Faculty
14 Biochemistry, Chemistry and Pharmacy
 
Date Issued
19 December 2025
 
Publisher(s)
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt
 
Handle
https://gude.uni-frankfurt.de/handle/gude/707
 
DOI
10.25716/gude.128z-2wdt
 

Type(s) of data
Dataset
 
Language(s)
en
 
Abstract(s)
AbstractLanguage
Biological processes rely on finely tuned homo- and heteromeric interactions between (biomacro)molecules. The strength of an interaction, typically given by the dissociation constant (KD), plays a crucial role in basic research and must be monitored throughout the development of drugs and agrochemicals. An ideal method for KD determination is applicable to various analytes with a large range of affinities, tolerates complex matrix compositions, does not require labeling, and simultaneously provides information on the structural integrity of the binding partners. Native mass spectrometry meets these criteria but typically struggles with homooligomeric complexes due to overlapping mass signals. To overcome this, we resolve monomer/dimer contributions to overlapping MS-peaks by separately analyzing the charge state distribution of each oligomeric species via sample dilution and covalent crosslinking. Following this approach, we show that quantitative Laser-Induced Liquid Bead Ion Desorption mass spectrometry (qLILBID-MS) accurately captures the affinities of Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) and chemically induced dimers of Tryparedoxin (Tpx), an oxidoreductase from human pathogenic Trypanosoma brucei parasites, with various molecular glues and homodimer affinities. Conveniently, qLILBID-MS requires a fraction of sample used by other methods such as isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and yields previously inaccessible protein homodimer KDs in the high micromolar range, which allowed us to monitor the gradual decrease in homodimer affinity via mutation of crucial dimer interface contacts. Overall, qLILBID-MS is a sensitive, robust, fast, scalable, and cost-effective alternative to quantify protein/protein interactions, that can accelerate contemporary drug discovery workflows, e.g. the efficient screening for proximity inducing molecules like proteolysis targeting chimera (PROTACs) and molecular glues.
en
 
Description(s)
DescriptionLanguage
The data and data analysis scripts in this dataset are referenced in the manuscript, "Quantifying the effect of molecular glues and interface residues on protein homodimer affinities by native mass spectrometry", which is in preparation for publication. The contents of this dataset are as follows:

1) raw spectra and imaging data from qLILBID experiments
4) programming scripts used to process the qLILBID data
en
 

License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) cclicense-logocclicense-logo
 

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