4.7 Article

Protein Quantification in Label-Free LC-MS Experiments

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages 5275-5284

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr900610q

Keywords

Quantitative proteomics; Protein quantification; LC-MS; Analysis of Variance; Mixed models; Missing data

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The goal of many LC-MS proteomic investigations is to quantify and compare the abundance of proteins in complex biological mixtures However, the output of an LC-MS experiment is not a list of proteins, but a list of quantified spectral features. To make protein-level conclusions, researchers typically apply ad hoc rules, or take an average of feature abundance to obtain a single protein-level quantity for each sample We argue that these two approaches are inadequate. We discuss two statistical models, namely, fixed and mixed effects Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), which views individual features as replicate measurements of a protein's abundance, and explicitly account for this redundancy. We demonstrate, using a spike-in and a clinical data set, that the proposed models improve the sensitivity and specificity of testing, improve the accuracy of patient-specific protein quantifications, and are more robust in the presence of missing data.

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