6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c13c2

RESEARCH PRODUCT

"Design and application of a data-independent precursor and product ion repository."

Andrew K. OttensGeorgios EfstathiouJames I. LangridgeJohannes P. C. VissersAntoine H. P. AmericaM. Arthur MoseleyGreg S. CaveyDavid DanielDarrin MannMark R. DelongYishai LevinYishai LevinStefan TenzerScott J. GeromanosKonstantinos ThalassinosKonstantinos ThalassinosJ. Will ThompsonJames H. Scrivens

subject

ProteomicsRelational databaseTandem mass spectrometryMass SpectrometryPRI BIOS Applied Genomics & ProteomicsIonprotein identificationStructural BiologyLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometryspectral librarytandem mass-spectrometryInstrumentation (computer programming)large-scale proteomicsDatabases ProteinPeptide sequenceSpectroscopylc-msComplement (set theory)IonsChemistryProteinsReproducibility of Resultsacquisitionresolutionms/ms spectraCombinatorial chemistryquantificationIdentification (information)Database Management SystemsPeptidesBiological systemChromatography Liquidpeptide identification

description

The functional design and application of a data-independent LC-MS precursor and product ion repository for protein identification, quantification, and validation is conceptually described. The ion repository was constructed from the sequence search results of a broad range of discovery experiments investigating various tissue types of two closely related mammalian species. The relative high degree of similarity in protein complement, ion detection, and peptide and protein identification allows for the analysis of normalized precursor and product ion intensity values, as well as standardized retention times, creating a multidimensional/orthogonal queryable, qualitative, and quantitative space. Peptide ion map selection for identification and quantification is primarily based on replication and limited variation. The information is stored in a relational database and is used to create peptide- and protein-specific fragment ion maps that can be queried in a targeted fashion against the raw or time aligned ion detections. These queries can be conducted either individually or as groups, where the latter affords pathway and molecular machinery analysis of the protein complement. The presented results also suggest that peptide ionization and fragmentation efficiencies are highly conserved between experiments and practically independent of the analyzed biological sample when using similar instrumentation. Moreover, the data illustrate only minor variation in ionization efficiency with amino acid sequence substitutions occurring between species. Finally, the data and the presented results illustrate how LC-MS performance metrics can be extracted and utilized to ensure optimal performance of the employed analytical workflows.

10.1007/s13361-012-0416-9https://doi.org/10.1007/s13361-012-0416-9