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Reproducible workflow for multiplexed deep-scale proteome and phosphoproteome analysis of tumor tissues by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry.

Authors :
Mertins P
Tang LC
Krug K
Clark DJ
Gritsenko MA
Chen L
Clauser KR
Clauss TR
Shah P
Gillette MA
Petyuk VA
Thomas SN
Mani DR
Mundt F
Moore RJ
Hu Y
Zhao R
Schnaubelt M
Keshishian H
Monroe ME
Zhang Z
Udeshi ND
Mani D
Davies SR
Townsend RR
Chan DW
Smith RD
Zhang H
Liu T
Carr SA
Source :
Nature protocols [Nat Protoc] 2018 Jul; Vol. 13 (7), pp. 1632-1661.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Here we present an optimized workflow for global proteome and phosphoproteome analysis of tissues or cell lines that uses isobaric tags (TMT (tandem mass tags)-10) for multiplexed analysis and relative quantification, and provides 3× higher throughput than iTRAQ (isobaric tags for absolute and relative quantification)-4-based methods with high intra- and inter-laboratory reproducibility. The workflow was systematically characterized and benchmarked across three independent laboratories using two distinct breast cancer subtypes from patient-derived xenograft models to enable assessment of proteome and phosphoproteome depth and quantitative reproducibility. Each plex consisted of ten samples, each being 300 μg of peptide derived from <50 mg of wet-weight tissue. Of the 10,000 proteins quantified per sample, we could distinguish 7,700 human proteins derived from tumor cells and 3100 mouse proteins derived from the surrounding stroma and blood. The maximum deviation across replicates and laboratories was <7%, and the inter-laboratory correlation for TMT ratio-based comparison of the two breast cancer subtypes was r > 0.88. The maximum deviation for the phosphoproteome coverage was <24% across laboratories, with an average of >37,000 quantified phosphosites per sample and differential quantification correlations of r > 0.72. The full procedure, including sample processing and data generation, can be completed within 10 d for ten tissue samples, and 100 samples can be analyzed in ~4 months using a single LC-MS/MS instrument. The high quality, depth, and reproducibility of the data obtained both within and across laboratories should enable new biological insights to be obtained from mass spectrometry-based proteomics analyses of cells and tissues together with proteogenomic data integration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1750-2799
Volume :
13
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature protocols
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29988108
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41596-018-0006-9