4.8 Article

Evaluation of Spectral Counting for Relative Quantitation of Proteoforms in Top-Down Proteomics

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 88, Issue 22, Pages 10900-10907

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b02151

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM021248, OD019938]

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Spectral counting is a straightforward label-free quantitation strategy used in bottom-up proteomics workflows. The application of spectral counting in label-free top-down proteomics workflows can be similarly straightforward but has not been applied as widely as quantitation by chromatographic peak areas or peak intensities. In this study, we evaluate spectral counting for quantitative comparisons in label-free top down proteomics workflows by comparison with chromatographic peak areas and intensities. We tested these quantitation approaches by spiking standard proteins into a complex protein background and comparing relative quantitation by spectral counts with normalized chromatographic peak areas and peak intensities from deconvoluted extracted ion chromatograms of the spiked proteins. Ratio estimates and statistical significance of differential abundance from each quantitation technique are evaluated against the expected ratios and each other. In this experiment, spectral counting was able to detect differential abundance of spiked proteins for expected ratios with comparable or higher sensitivity than normalized areas and intensities. We also found that while ratio estimates using peak areas and intensities are usually more accurate, the spectral-counting-based estimates are not substantially worse. Following the evaluation and comparison of these label-free top down quantitation strategies using spiked proteins, spectral counting, along with normalized chromatographic peak areas and intensities, were used to analyze the complex protein cargo of exosomes shed by myeloid-derived suppressor cells collected under high and low conditions of inflammation, revealing statistically significant differences in abundance for several proteoforms, including the active pro-inflammatory proteins S100A8 and S100A9.

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