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Identification of Analytical Factors Affecting Complex Proteomics Profiles Acquired in a Factorial Design Study with Analysis of Variance: Simultaneous Component Analysis
Complex shotgun proteomics peptide
profiles obtained in quantitative
differential protein expression studies, such as in biomarker discovery,
may be affected by multiple experimental factors. These preanalytical
factors may affect the measured protein abundances which in turn influence
the outcome of the associated statistical analysis and validation.
It is therefore important to determine which factors influence the
abundance of peptides in a complex proteomics experiment and to identify
those peptides that are most influenced by these factors. In the current
study we analyzed depleted human serum samples to evaluate experimental
factors that may influence the resulting peptide profile such as the
residence time in the autosampler at 4 Ā°C, stopping or not stopping
the trypsin digestion with acid, the type of blood collection tube,
different hemolysis levels, differences in clotting times, the number
of freezeāthaw cycles, and different trypsin/protein ratios.
To this end we used a two-level fractional factorial design of resolution
IV (2<sub>IV</sub><sup>7ā3</sup>). The design required analysis of 16 samples in which the main effects
were not confounded by two-factor interactions. Data preprocessing
using the Threshold Avoiding Proteomics Pipeline (Suits, F.; Hoekman, B.; Rosenling, T.; Bischoff,
R.; Horvatovich, P. Anal. Chem. 2011, 83, 7786ā7794, ref ) produced a data-matrix containing quantitative information on 2āÆ559
peaks. The intensity of the peaks was log-transformed, and peaks having
intensities of a low <i>t</i>-test significance (<i>p</i>-value > 0.05) and a low absolute fold ratio (<2)
between
the two levels of each factor were removed. The remaining peaks were
subjected to analysis of variance (ANOVA)-simultaneous component analysis
(ASCA). Permutation tests were used to
identify which of the preanalytical factors influenced the abundance
of the measured peptides most significantly. The most important preanalytical
factors affecting peptide intensity were (1) the hemolysis level,
(2) stopping trypsin digestion with acid, and (3) the trypsin/protein
ratio. This provides guidelines for the experimentalist to keep the
ratio of trypsin/protein constant and to control the trypsin reaction
by stopping it with acid at an accurately set pH. The hemolysis level
cannot be controlled tightly as it depends on the status of a patientās
blood (e.g., red blood cells are more fragile in patients undergoing
chemotherapy) and the care with which blood was sampled (e.g., by
avoiding shear stress). However, its level can be determined with
a simple UV spectrophotometric measurement and samples with extreme
levels or the peaks affected by hemolysis can be discarded from further
analysis. The loadings of the ASCA model led to peptide peaks that
were most affected by a given factor, for example, to hemoglobin-derived
peptides in the case of the hemolysis level. Peak intensity differences
for these peptides were assessed by means of extracted ion chromatograms
confirming the results of the ASCA model