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Deep learning the collisional cross sections of the peptide universe from a million experimental values.

Florian MeierNiklas D KöhlerAndreas-David BrunnerJean-Marc H WankaEugenia VoytikMaximillian T StraussFabian Joachim TheisMatthias Mann
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
The size and shape of peptide ions in the gas phase are an under-explored dimension for mass spectrometry-based proteomics. To investigate the nature and utility of the peptide collisional cross section (CCS) space, we measure more than a million data points from whole-proteome digests of five organisms with trapped ion mobility spectrometry (TIMS) and parallel accumulation-serial fragmentation (PASEF). The scale and precision (CV < 1%) of our data is sufficient to train a deep recurrent neural network that accurately predicts CCS values solely based on the peptide sequence. Cross section predictions for the synthetic ProteomeTools peptides validate the model within a 1.4% median relative error (R > 0.99). Hydrophobicity, proportion of prolines and position of histidines are main determinants of the cross sections in addition to sequence-specific interactions. CCS values can now be predicted for any peptide and organism, forming a basis for advanced proteomics workflows that make full use of the additional information.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • deep learning
  • neural network
  • electronic health record
  • high resolution
  • liquid chromatography
  • big data
  • artificial intelligence
  • amino acid
  • machine learning
  • capillary electrophoresis