A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Rapid mass spectrometric conversion of tissue biopsy samples into permanent quantitative digital proteome maps




AuthorsGuo TN, Kouvonen P, Koh CC, Gillet LC, Wolski WE, Rost HL, Rosenberger G, Collins BC, Blum LC, Gillessen S, Joerger M, Jochum W, Aebersold R

PublisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Publication year2015

Journal: Nature Medicine

Journal name in sourceNATURE MEDICINE

Journal acronymNAT MED

Volume21

Issue4

First page 407

Last page413

Number of pages9

ISSN1078-8956

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/nm.3807


Abstract

Clinical specimens are each inherently unique, limited and nonrenewable. Small samples such as tissue biopsies are often completely consumed after a limited number of analyses. Here we present a method that enables fast and reproducible conversion of a small amount of tissue (approximating the quantity obtained by a biopsy) into a single, permanent digital file representing the mass spectrometry (MS)-measurable proteome of the sample. The method combines pressure cycling technology (PCT) and sequential window acquisition of all theoretical fragment ion spectra (SWATH)-MS. The resulting proteome maps can be analyzed, re-analyzed, compared and mined in silico to detect and quantify specific proteins across multiple samples. We used this method to process and convert 18 biopsy samples from nine patients with renal cell carcinoma into SWATH-MS fragment ion maps. From these proteome maps we detected and quantified more than 2,000 proteins with a high degree of reproducibility across all samples. The measured proteins clearly distinguished tumorous kidney tissues from healthy tissues and differentiated distinct histomorphological kidney cancer subtypes.




Last updated on 26/11/2024 10:55:52 PM