Sequential Windowed Acquisition of Reporter Masses for Quantitation-First Proteomics.
William D BarshopShima RayatpishehHee Jong KimJames A WohlschlegelPublished in: Journal of proteome research (2019)
The standard approach for proteomic data acquisition of isobaric-tagged samples by mass spectrometry is data-dependent acquisition. This semistochastic, identification-first paradigm generates a wealth of peptide-level data without regard to relative abundance. We introduce a data acquisition concept called sequential windowed acquisition of reporter masses (SWARM). This approach performs quantitation first, thereby allowing subsequent acquisition decisions to be predicated on user-defined patterns of reporter ion intensities. The efficacy of this approach is validated through experiments with both synthetic mixtures of Escherichia coli ribosomes spiked into human cell lysates at known ratios and the quantitative evaluation of the human proteome's response to the inhibition of cullin-based protein ubiquitination via the small molecule MLN4924. We find that SWARM-informed parallel reaction monitoring acquisitions display effective acquisition biasing toward analytes displaying quantitative characteristics of interest, resulting in an improvement in the detection of differentially abundant analytes. The SWARM concept provides a flexible platform for the further development of new acquisition methods.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- small molecule
- escherichia coli
- electronic health record
- endothelial cells
- big data
- crispr cas
- liquid chromatography
- ms ms
- computed tomography
- staphylococcus aureus
- high throughput
- single cell
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- protein protein
- label free
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- capillary electrophoresis
- bone marrow
- fine needle aspiration
- contrast enhanced ultrasound