4.7 Article

Advancing Urinary Protein Biomarker Discovery by Data-Independent Acquisition on a Quadrupole-Orbitrap Mass Spectrometer

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 4752-4762

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.5b00826

Keywords

DIA; QE; urine proteomics; biomarker discovery; spectral library

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institute of Health Shared Instrumentation Grant [S10OD010706]
  2. Harvard Institute of Translational Immunology
  3. Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust
  4. U.S. National Institute of Health [K08CA160660]

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The promises of data-independent acquisition (DIA) strategies are a comprehensive and reproducible digital qualitative and quantitative record of the proteins present in a sample. We developed a fast and robust DIA method for comprehensive mapping of the urinary proteome that enables large scale urine proteomics studies. Compared to a data-dependent acquisition (DDA) experiments, our DIA assay doubled the number of identified peptides and proteins per sample at half the coefficients of variation observed for DDA data (DIA = similar to 8%; DDA = similar to 16%). We also tested different spectral libraries and their effects on overall protein and peptide identifications and their reproducibilities, which provided clear evidence that sample type-specific spectral libraries are preferred for reliable data analysis. To show applicability for biomarker discovery experiments, we analyzed a sample set of 87 urine samples from children seen in the emergency department with abdominal pain. The whole set was analyzed with high proteome coverage (similar to 1300 proteins/sample) in less than 4 days. The data set revealed excellent biomarker candidates for ovarian cyst and urinary tract infection. The improved throughput and quantitative performance of our optimized DIA workflow allow for the efficient simultaneous discovery and verification of biomarker candidates without the requirement for an early bias toward selected proteins.

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