5 research outputs found

    Software Lock Mass by Two-Dimensional Minimization of Peptide Mass Errors

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    Mass accuracy is a key parameter in proteomic experiments, improving specificity, and success rates of peptide identification. Advances in instrumentation now make it possible to routinely obtain high resolution data in proteomic experiments. To compensate for drifts in instrument calibration, a compound of known mass is often employed. This ‘lock mass’ provides an internal mass standard in every spectrum. Here we take advantage of the complexity of typical peptide mixtures in proteomics to eliminate the requirement for a physical lock mass. We find that mass scale drift is primarily a function of the m/z and the elution time dimensions. Using a subset of high confidence peptide identifications from a first pass database search, which effectively substitute for the lock mass, we set up a global mathematical minimization problem. We perform a simultaneous fit in two dimensions using a function whose parameterization is automatically adjusted to the complexity of the analyzed peptide mixture. Mass deviation of the high confidence peptides from their calculated values is then minimized globally as a function of both m/z value and elution time. The resulting recalibration function performs equal or better than adding a lock mass from laboratory air to LTQ-Orbitrap spectra. This ‘software lock mass’ drastically improves mass accuracy compared with mass measurement without lock mass (up to 10-fold), with none of the experimental cost of a physical lock mass, and it integrated into the freely available MaxQuant analysis pipeline (www.maxquant.org)

    Identification of Membrane Proteins From Mammalian Cell/Tissue Using Methanol-Facilitated Solubilization and Tryptic Digestion Coupled with 2D-LC-MS/MS

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    The core prerequisites for an efficient proteome-scale analysis of mammalian membrane proteins are effective isolation, solubilization, digestion and multidimensional liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). This protocol is for analysis of the mammalian membrane proteome that relies on solubilization and tryptic digestion of membrane proteins in a buffer containing 60% (vol/vol) methanol. Tryptic digestion is followed by strong cation exchange (SCX) chromatography and reversed phase (RP) chromatography coupled online with MS/MS for protein identification. The use of a methanol-based buffer eliminates the need for reagents that interfere with chromatographic resolution and ionization of the peptides (e.g., detergents, chaotropes, inorganic salts). Sample losses are minimized because solubilization and digestion are carried out in a single tube avoiding any sample transfer or buffer exchange between these steps. This protocol is compatible with stable isotope labeling at the protein and peptide level, enabling identification and quantitation of integral membrane proteins. The entire procedure--beginning with isolated membrane fraction and finishing with MS data acquisition--takes 4-5 d
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