4.7 Article

An Empirical Approach to Signature Peptide Choice for Selected Reaction Monitoring: Quantification of Uromodulin in Urine

Journal

CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 62, Issue 1, Pages 198-207

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2015.242495

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
  2. Johns Hopkins Proteomic Innovation Center in Heart Failure [HHSN268201000032C]
  3. National Insitute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [U01-U01DK085689]

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BACKGROUND: Many avenues have been proposed for a seamless transition between biomarker discovery data and selected reaction monitoring (SRM) assays for biomarker validation. Unfortunately, studies with the abundant urinary protein uromodulin have shown that these methods do not converge on a consistent set of surrogate peptides for targeted mass spectrometry. As an alternative, we present an empirical peptide selection work flow for robust protein quantification. METHODS: We compared the relative SRM signal intensity of 12 uromodulin-derived peptides between tryptic digests of 9 urine samples. Pairwise CVs between the 12 peptides were 0.19-0.99. We used a correlation matrix to identify peptides that reproducibly tracked the amount of uromodulin protein and selected 4 peptides with robust and highly correlated SRM signals. Absolute quantification was performed with stable isotope labeled versions of these peptides as internal standards and a standard curve prepared from a tryptic digest of purified uromodulin. RESULTS: Absolute quantification of uromodulin in 40 clinical urine samples yielded interpeptide correlations of >= 0.984 and correlations of >= 0.912 with ELISA data. The SRM assays were linear over >3 orders of magnitude and had typical interdigest CVs of <10%, interinjection CVs of <7%, and intertransition CVs of <7%. CONCLUSIONS: Comparing the apparent abundance of a plurality of peptides derived from the same target protein makes it possible to select signature peptides that are unaffected by the unpredictable confounding factors inevitably present in biological samples. (C) 2015 American Association for Clinical Chemistry

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