4.5 Article Book Chapter

Mass Spectrometry-Based Biomarker Discovery: Toward a Global Proteome Index of Individuality

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 2, Issue -, Pages 265-277

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.anchem.1.031207.112942

Keywords

biological variability; analytical variability; longitudinal sampling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health National Cancer Institute [K25CA128666, R33CA105295]
  2. W.M. Keck Foundation
  3. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R33CA105295, K25CA128666] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Biomarker discovery and proteomics have become synonymous with mass spectrometry in recent years. Although this conflation is an injustice to the many essential biomolecular techniques widely used in biomarker-discovery platforms, it underscores the power and potential of contemporary mass spectrometry. Numerous novel and powerful technologies have been developed around mass spectrometry, proteomics, and biomarker discovery over the past 20 years to globally study complex proteomes (e.g., plasma). However, very few large-scale longitudinal Studies have been carried out using these platforms to establish the analytical variability relative to true biological variability. The purpose of this review is not to cover exhaustively the applications of mass spectrometry to biomarker discovery, but rather to discuss the analytical methods and strategies that have been developed for mass spectrometry-based biomarker-discovery platforms and to place them in the context of the many challenges and opportunities yet to be addressed.

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