Cost-effective generation of precise label-free quantitative proteomes in high-throughput by microLC and data-independent acquisition.
Jakob VowinckelAleksej ZelezniakRoland BrudererMichael MüllederLukas ReiterMarkus RalserPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
Quantitative proteomics is key for basic research, but needs improvements to satisfy an increasing demand for large sample series in diagnostics, academia and industry. A switch from nanoflowrate to microflowrate chromatography can improve throughput and reduce costs. However, concerns about undersampling and coverage have so far hampered its broad application. We used a QTOF mass spectrometer of the penultimate generation (TripleTOF5600), converted a nanoLC system into a microflow platform, and adapted a SWATH regime for large sample series by implementing retention time- and batch correction strategies. From 3 µg to 5 µg of unfractionated tryptic digests that are obtained from proteomics-typical amounts of starting material, microLC-SWATH-MS quantifies up to 4000 human or 1750 yeast proteins in an hour or less. In the acquisition of 750 yeast proteomes, retention times varied between 2% and 5%, and quantified the typical peptide with 5-8% signal variation in replicates, and below 20% in samples acquired over a five-months period. Providing precise quantities without being dependent on the latest hardware, our study demonstrates that the combination of microflow chromatography and data-independent acquisition strategies has the potential to overcome current bottlenecks in academia and industry, enabling the cost-effective generation of precise quantitative proteomes in large scale.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- label free
- high resolution
- high throughput
- liquid chromatography
- high speed
- electronic health record
- high performance liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- ms ms
- endothelial cells
- blood pressure
- big data
- multiple sclerosis
- healthcare
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- risk assessment
- cell wall
- quality improvement
- human health