4.7 Article

Automated 16-Plex Plasma Proteomics with Real-Time Search and Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry Enables Large-Scale Profiling in Naked Mole-Rats and Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 1280-1295

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.0c00681

Keywords

high throughput; automated proteome sample preparation; isobaric labeling; TMTpro; FAIMS Pro; RTS; Hamilton Vantage; naked mole-rats; circadian rhythm; UV radiation

Funding

  1. Calico Life Sciences LLC

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Large-scale plasma proteome profiling is challenging due to time limitations, but the AutoMP3 platform has enabled fully automated multiplexed proteome analysis. The study of naked mole-rat plasma proteome revealed significant species differences in response to circadian rhythms and UV exposure.
Performing large-scale plasma proteome profiling is challenging due to limitations imposed by lengthy preparation and instrument time. We present a fully automated multiplexed proteome profiling platform (AutoMP3) using the Hamilton Vantage liquid handling robot capable of preparing hundreds to thousands of samples. To maximize protein depth in single-shot runs, we combined 16-plex Tandem Mass Tags (TMTpro) with high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS Pro) and real-time search (RTS). We quantified over 40 proteins/min/sample, doubling the previously published rates. We applied AutoMP3 to investigate the naked mole-rat plasma proteome both as a function of the circadian cycle and in response to ultraviolet (UV) treatment. In keeping with the lack of synchronized circadian rhythms in naked mole-rats, we find few circadian patterns in plasma proteins over the course of 48 h. Furthermore, we quantify many disparate changes between mice and naked mole-rats at both 48 h and one week after UV exposure. These species differences in plasma protein temporal responses could contribute to the pronounced cancer resistance observed in naked mole-rats. The mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE [1] partner repository with the dataset identifier PXD022891.

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