On Induced Dissociation MS/MS on the top 10 most intense MS spectral peaks). Each fraction’s spectra were searched using SEQUEST [29] against the E. coli proteome which included decoy database entries [30] and allowed for differential serine and threonine phosphate modifications (+79.966331), a differential methionine oxidation modification (15.9949146221) and a constant cysteine modification of +57.02146374. Following SEQUEST analysis, peptides from spectra containing predicted serine and threonine phosphorylated peptides were summarized for motif analysis. In order to minimize false positives, for each of the two classes of peptide charges z = +2 and z = +3 and greater, minimum XCORR thresholds were chosen to be above the value of the highest XCORR for a decoy hit from the database. The deltaXCORR (the difference between the first and second hits to the databases) was always required to be 0.08. This corresponded to a predicted False Discovery Rate (FDR) of 0 , however it was still subject to statistical variations and may have included some small contamination of false positives. For each input sample, peptides from each fraction (or combined fractions) were identified with a predicted FDR of 0 as described, and then the peptides were combined into a single list of non-redundant peptides for each fraction. Redundant peptides occurring across fractions, but not across samples were highly specific for a particular kinase, and many peptides were identified in more than one independent spectrum. Negative controls occasionally shared peptides with positive samples and with other negative controls. The final lists of peptides used for each kinases’ motif analysis consisted of phosphopeptides that were not contained in controls nor previously reported to be found in the normal E. coli proteome [14].manuscript describing pLogos as well as a pLogo generation web site (http://plogo.uconn.edu) are currently in preparation. motif-x analyses. motif-x analyses for both the PKA and CK II MS/MS peptide identification results were carried out using an internal version of the motif-x web tool [33] with the following parameters selected: central residue = S* or T*, width = 15, foreground occurrence threshold = 5, significance threshold = 0.00001, background database = NCBI E. coli proteome, and background central residue = S or T.scan-x analyses of known and random JWH 133 web kinase substrates. scan-x analyses of known and random substrateswere carried out using an internal version of the scan-x software (described in detail in SC-66 reference [13]). Known verified human substrates of PKA and CK II were retrieved from the PhosphoSitePlus database [16] (http://phosphosite.org), while random substrates were obtained by randomly choosing an equivalent number of serine/threonine 15 mers from the human proteome. A whole proteome scan was also carried out using the PKA and CK II pLogos against the entire SwissProt Human proteome containing nearly 1.17 million serine- and threoninecentered 15 mers to generate a ranked list of the highest scoring predicted substrates for those respective kinases. ROC curve analysis. To obtain a “gold-standard” data set for ROC curve generation all human phosphorylation sites within the PhosphoSitePlus database which were only known to be phosphorylated by a single human kinase were retrieved. Sites shown to be phosphorylated by PKA were called “positive PKA sites” while those known to be phosphorylated by a different kinase were called “.On Induced Dissociation MS/MS on the top 10 most intense MS spectral peaks). Each fraction’s spectra were searched using SEQUEST [29] against the E. coli proteome which included decoy database entries [30] and allowed for differential serine and threonine phosphate modifications (+79.966331), a differential methionine oxidation modification (15.9949146221) and a constant cysteine modification of +57.02146374. Following SEQUEST analysis, peptides from spectra containing predicted serine and threonine phosphorylated peptides were summarized for motif analysis. In order to minimize false positives, for each of the two classes of peptide charges z = +2 and z = +3 and greater, minimum XCORR thresholds were chosen to be above the value of the highest XCORR for a decoy hit from the database. The deltaXCORR (the difference between the first and second hits to the databases) was always required to be 0.08. This corresponded to a predicted False Discovery Rate (FDR) of 0 , however it was still subject to statistical variations and may have included some small contamination of false positives. For each input sample, peptides from each fraction (or combined fractions) were identified with a predicted FDR of 0 as described, and then the peptides were combined into a single list of non-redundant peptides for each fraction. Redundant peptides occurring across fractions, but not across samples were highly specific for a particular kinase, and many peptides were identified in more than one independent spectrum. Negative controls occasionally shared peptides with positive samples and with other negative controls. The final lists of peptides used for each kinases’ motif analysis consisted of phosphopeptides that were not contained in controls nor previously reported to be found in the normal E. coli proteome [14].manuscript describing pLogos as well as a pLogo generation web site (http://plogo.uconn.edu) are currently in preparation. motif-x analyses. motif-x analyses for both the PKA and CK II MS/MS peptide identification results were carried out using an internal version of the motif-x web tool [33] with the following parameters selected: central residue = S* or T*, width = 15, foreground occurrence threshold = 5, significance threshold = 0.00001, background database = NCBI E. coli proteome, and background central residue = S or T.scan-x analyses of known and random kinase substrates. scan-x analyses of known and random substrateswere carried out using an internal version of the scan-x software (described in detail in reference [13]). Known verified human substrates of PKA and CK II were retrieved from the PhosphoSitePlus database [16] (http://phosphosite.org), while random substrates were obtained by randomly choosing an equivalent number of serine/threonine 15 mers from the human proteome. A whole proteome scan was also carried out using the PKA and CK II pLogos against the entire SwissProt Human proteome containing nearly 1.17 million serine- and threoninecentered 15 mers to generate a ranked list of the highest scoring predicted substrates for those respective kinases. ROC curve analysis. To obtain a “gold-standard” data set for ROC curve generation all human phosphorylation sites within the PhosphoSitePlus database which were only known to be phosphorylated by a single human kinase were retrieved. Sites shown to be phosphorylated by PKA were called “positive PKA sites” while those known to be phosphorylated by a different kinase were called “.