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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Sample Preparation for Mass-spectrometry-based Proteomics Analysis of Ocular Microvessels
Carsten SchmelterLars StraßburgerAdrian GerickeCaroline ManicamNatarajan PerumalFranz H. GrusNorbert Pfeiffersubject
Proteomics0301 basic medicineSwineGeneral Chemical EngineeringComputational biologyEyeProteomicsMass spectrometryMass SpectrometryGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineProtein purificationAnimalsHumansSample preparationGel electrophoresisMass spectrometry based proteomicsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGeneral NeuroscienceAnalytic Sample Preparation Methods030104 developmental biologyMicrovesselsProteome030217 neurology & neurosurgeryChromatography LiquidHomogenization (biology)description
The use of isolated ocular blood vessels in vitro to decipher the pathophysiological state of the eye using advanced technological approaches has greatly expanded our understanding of certain diseases. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics has emerged as a powerful tool to unravel alterations in the molecular mechanisms and protein signaling pathways in the vascular beds in health and disease. However, sample preparation steps prior to MS analyses are crucial to obtain reproducible results and in-depth elucidation of the complex proteome. This is particularly important for preparation of ocular microvessels, where the amount of sample available for analyses is often limited and thus, poses a challenge for optimum protein extraction. This article endeavors to provide an efficient, rapid and robust protocol for sample preparation from an exemplary retrobulbar ocular vascular bed employing the porcine short posterior ciliary arteries. The present method focuses on protein extraction procedures from both the supernatant and pellet of the sample following homogenization, sample cleaning with centrifugal filter devices prior to one-dimensional gel electrophoresis and peptide purification steps for label-free quantification in a liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-linear ion trap-Orbitrap MS system. Although this method has been developed specifically for proteomics analyses of ocular microvessels, we have also provided convincing evidence that it can also be readily employed for other tissue-based samples.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-02-22 | Journal of Visualized Experiments |