4.7 Article

SPPUSM: An MS/MS spectra merging strategy for improved low-input and single-cell proteome identification

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ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 1279, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2023.341793

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Single and rare cell analysis provides unique insights into biological processes and diseases. However, current techniques for proteome analysis in trace amounts or single cells lag behind DNA and RNA techniques. We propose a MS/MS spectra merging strategy for improved low-input and single-cell proteome data analysis, which showed improved protein identification and potential for more sensitive studies.
Single and rare cell analysis provides unique insights into the investigation of biological processes and disease progress by resolving the cellular heterogeneity that is masked by bulk measurements. Although many efforts have been made, the techniques used to measure the proteome in trace amounts of samples or in single cells still lag behind those for DNA and RNA due to the inherent non-amplifiable nature of proteins and the sensitivity limitation of current mass spectrometry. Here, we report an MS/MS spectra merging strategy termed SPPUSM (same precursor-produced unidentified spectra merging) for improved low-input and single-cell proteome data analysis. In this method, all the unidentified MS/MS spectra from multiple test files are first extracted. Then, the corresponding MS/MS spectra produced by the same precursor ion from different files are matched according to their precursor mass and retention time (RT) and are merged into one new spectrum. The newly merged spectra with more fragment ions are next searched against the database to increase the MS/MS spectra identification and proteome coverage. Further improvement can be achieved by increasing the number of test files and spectra to be merged. Up to 18.2% improvement in protein identification was achieved for 1 ng HeLa peptides by SPPUSM. Reliability evaluation by the entrapment database strategy using merged spectra from human and E. coli revealed a marginal error rate for the proposed method. For application in single cell proteome (SCP) study, identification enhancement of 28%-61% was achieved for proteins for different SCP data. Furthermore, a lower abundance was found for the SPPUSM-identified peptides, indicating its potential for more sensitive low sample input and SCP studies.

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