4.8 Article

A Multiplex Fragment-Ion-Based Method for Accurate Proteome Quantification

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 91, Issue 6, Pages 3921-3928

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.8b04806

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0505003, 2016YFA0501401]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation [21725506, 91543201, 91753110, 21405154]
  3. CAS Key Project in Frontier Science [QYZDY-SSW-SLH017]
  4. Innovation program from DICP, CAS [DICP TMSR201601, DMTO201701]

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Multiplex proteome quantification with high accuracy is urgently required to achieve a comprehensive understanding of dynamic cellular and physiological processes. Among the existing quantification strategies, fragment-ion based methods can provide highly accurate results, but the multiplex capacity is limited to 3-plex. Herein, we developed a multiplex pseudo-isobaric dimethyl labeling (m-pIDL) method to extend the capacity of the fragment-ion-based method to 6-plex by one-step dimethyl labeling with several millidalton and dalton mass differences between precursor ions and enlarging the isolation window of precursor ions to 10 m/z during data acquisition. m-pIDL showed high quantification accuracy within the 20-fold dynamic range. Notably, the ratio compression was 1.13-fold in a benchmark two-proteome model (5:1 mixed E. coli proteins with HeLa proteins as interference), indicating that by m-pIDL, the ratio distortion of isobaric labeling approaches and the approximate 40% ratio shift of the label free quantification strategy could be effectively eliminated. Additionally, m-pIDL did not show ratio variation among post translational modifications (CV = 6.66%), which could benefit the measurement of universal protein properties for proteomic atlases. We further employed m-pIDL to monitor the time-resolved responses of the TGF-beta-induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in lung adenocarcinoma A549 cell lines, which facilitated the finding of new potential regulatory proteins. Therefore, the 6-plex quantification of m-pIDL with the remarkably high accuracy might create new prospects for comprehensive proteome analysis.

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