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Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry

Mass spectrometry-based analyses are essential tools in the field of biomarker research. However, detection and characterization of plasma low abundance and/or low molecular weight peptides is challenged by the presence of highly abundant proteins, salts and lipids. Numerous strategies have already...

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Autores principales: Bertile, Fabrice, Robert, Flavie, Delval-Dubois, Véronique, Sanglier, Sarah, Schaeffer, Christine, Van Dorsselaer, Alain
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2717810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19662220
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author Bertile, Fabrice
Robert, Flavie
Delval-Dubois, Véronique
Sanglier, Sarah
Schaeffer, Christine
Van Dorsselaer, Alain
author_facet Bertile, Fabrice
Robert, Flavie
Delval-Dubois, Véronique
Sanglier, Sarah
Schaeffer, Christine
Van Dorsselaer, Alain
author_sort Bertile, Fabrice
collection PubMed
description Mass spectrometry-based analyses are essential tools in the field of biomarker research. However, detection and characterization of plasma low abundance and/or low molecular weight peptides is challenged by the presence of highly abundant proteins, salts and lipids. Numerous strategies have already been tested to reduce the complexity of plasma samples. The aim of this study was to enrich the low molecular weight fraction of rat plasma. To this end, we developed and compared simple protocols based on membrane filtration, solid phase extraction, and a combination of both. As assessed by UV absorbance, an albumin depletion >99% was obtained. The multistep fractionation strategy (including reverse phase HPLC) allowed detection, in a reproducible manner (CV < 30%–35%), of more than 450 peaks below 3000 Da by MALDI-TOF/MS. A MALDI-TOF/MS-determined LOD as low as 1 fmol/μL was obtained, thus allowing nanoLC-Chip/MS/MS identification of spiked peptides representing ~10(−6)% of total proteins, by weight. Signal peptide recovery ranged between 5%–100% according to the spiked peptide considered. Tens of peptide sequence tags from endogenous plasma peptides were also obtained and high confidence identifications of low abundance fibrinopeptide A and B are reported here to show the efficiency of the protocol. It is concluded that the fractionation protocol presented would be of particular interest for future differential (high throughput) analyses of the plasma low molecular weight fraction.
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spelling pubmed-27178102009-08-06 Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry Bertile, Fabrice Robert, Flavie Delval-Dubois, Véronique Sanglier, Sarah Schaeffer, Christine Van Dorsselaer, Alain Biomark Insights Original Research Mass spectrometry-based analyses are essential tools in the field of biomarker research. However, detection and characterization of plasma low abundance and/or low molecular weight peptides is challenged by the presence of highly abundant proteins, salts and lipids. Numerous strategies have already been tested to reduce the complexity of plasma samples. The aim of this study was to enrich the low molecular weight fraction of rat plasma. To this end, we developed and compared simple protocols based on membrane filtration, solid phase extraction, and a combination of both. As assessed by UV absorbance, an albumin depletion >99% was obtained. The multistep fractionation strategy (including reverse phase HPLC) allowed detection, in a reproducible manner (CV < 30%–35%), of more than 450 peaks below 3000 Da by MALDI-TOF/MS. A MALDI-TOF/MS-determined LOD as low as 1 fmol/μL was obtained, thus allowing nanoLC-Chip/MS/MS identification of spiked peptides representing ~10(−6)% of total proteins, by weight. Signal peptide recovery ranged between 5%–100% according to the spiked peptide considered. Tens of peptide sequence tags from endogenous plasma peptides were also obtained and high confidence identifications of low abundance fibrinopeptide A and B are reported here to show the efficiency of the protocol. It is concluded that the fractionation protocol presented would be of particular interest for future differential (high throughput) analyses of the plasma low molecular weight fraction. Libertas Academica 2007-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2717810/ /pubmed/19662220 Text en © 2007 by the authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Bertile, Fabrice
Robert, Flavie
Delval-Dubois, Véronique
Sanglier, Sarah
Schaeffer, Christine
Van Dorsselaer, Alain
Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title_full Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title_fullStr Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title_short Endogenous Plasma Peptide Detection and Identification in the Rat by a Combination of Fractionation Methods and Mass Spectrometry
title_sort endogenous plasma peptide detection and identification in the rat by a combination of fractionation methods and mass spectrometry
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2717810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19662220
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