Large-Scale Multiplexed Quantitative Discovery Proteomics Enabled by the Use of an 18O-Labeled “Universal” Reference Sample
- 21 November 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Proteome Research
- Vol. 8 (1) , 290-299
- https://doi.org/10.1021/pr800467r
Abstract
The quantitative comparison of protein abundances across a large number of biological or patient samples represents an important proteomics challenge that needs to be addressed for proteomics discovery applications. Herein, we describe a strategy that incorporates a stable isotope 18O-labeled “universal” reference sample as a comprehensive set of internal standards for analyzing large sample sets quantitatively. As a pooled sample, the 18O-labeled “universal” reference sample is spiked into each individually processed unlabeled biological sample and the peptide/protein abundances are quantified based on 16O/18O isotopic peptide pair abundance ratios that compare each unlabeled sample to the identical reference sample. This approach also allows for the direct application of label-free quantitation across the sample set simultaneously along with the labeling-approach (i.e., dual-quantitation) since each biological sample is unlabeled except for the labeled reference sample that is used as internal standards. The effectiveness of this approach for large-scale quantitative proteomics is demonstrated by its application to a set of 18 plasma samples from severe burn patients. When immunoaffinity depletion and cysteinyl-peptide enrichment-based fractionation with high resolution LC-MS measurements were combined, a total of 312 plasma proteins were confidently identified and quantified with a minimum of two unique peptides per protein. The isotope labeling data was directly compared with the label-free 16O-MS intensity data extracted from the same data sets. The results showed that the 18O reference-based labeling approach had significantly better quantitative precision compared to the label-free approach. The relative abundance differences determined by the two approaches also displayed strong correlation, illustrating the complementary nature of the two quantitative methods. The simplicity of including the 18O-reference for accurate quantitation makes this strategy especially attractive when a large number of biological samples are involved in a study where label-free quantitation may be problematic, for example, due to issues associated with instrument platform robustness. The approach will also be useful for more effectively discovering subtle abundance changes in broad systems biology studies.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Advances and Challenges in Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry-based Proteomics Profiling for Clinical ApplicationsMolecular & Cellular Proteomics, 2006
- Mass spectrometry–based proteomics turns quantitativeNature Chemical Biology, 2005
- Time-resolved Mass Spectrometry of Tyrosine Phosphorylation Sites in the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Signaling Network Reveals Dynamic ModulesMolecular & Cellular Proteomics, 2005
- Search for Cancer Markers from Endometrial Tissues Using Differentially Labeled Tags iTRAQ and cICAT with Multidimensional Liquid Chromatography and Tandem Mass SpectrometryJournal of Proteome Research, 2005
- Disease proteomicsNature, 2003
- Stable Isotope Labeling by Amino Acids in Cell Culture, SILAC, as a Simple and Accurate Approach to Expression ProteomicsMolecular & Cellular Proteomics, 2002
- Proteolytic 18O Labeling for Comparative Proteomics: Model Studies with Two Serotypes of AdenovirusAnalytical Chemistry, 2001
- Quantitative analysis of complex protein mixtures using isotope-coded affinity tagsNature Biotechnology, 1999
- High Throughput Proteome-Wide Precision Measurements of Protein Expression Using Mass SpectrometryJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Accurate quantitation of protein expression and site-specific phosphorylationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999