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Mag-Net: Rapid enrichment of membrane-bound particles enables high coverage quantitative analysis of the plasma proteome.

Authors :
Wu CC
Tsantilas KA
Park J
Plubell D
Sanders JA
Naicker P
Govender I
Buthelezi S
Stoychev S
Jordaan J
Merrihew G
Huang E
Parker ED
Riffle M
Hoofnagle AN
Noble WS
Poston KL
Montine TJ
MacCoss MJ
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2024 Apr 02. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 02.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Membrane-bound particles in plasma are composed of exosomes, microvesicles, and apoptotic bodies and represent ~1-2% of the total protein composition. Proteomic interrogation of this subset of plasma proteins augments the representation of tissue-specific proteins, representing a "liquid biopsy," while enabling the detection of proteins that would otherwise be beyond the dynamic range of liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry of unfractionated plasma. We have developed an enrichment strategy (Mag-Net) using hyper-porous strong-anion exchange magnetic microparticles to sieve membrane-bound particles from plasma. The Mag-Net method is robust, reproducible, inexpensive, and requires <100 μL plasma input. Coupled to a quantitative data-independent mass spectrometry analytical strategy, we demonstrate that we can collect results for >37,000 peptides from >4,000 plasma proteins with high precision. Using this analytical pipeline on a small cohort of patients with neurodegenerative disease and healthy age-matched controls, we discovered 204 proteins that differentiate (q-value < 0.05) patients with Alzheimer's disease dementia (ADD) from those without ADD. Our method also discovered 310 proteins that were different between Parkinson's disease and those with either ADD or healthy cognitively normal individuals. Using machine learning we were able to distinguish between ADD and not ADD with a mean ROC AUC = 0.98 ± 0.06.<br />Competing Interests: COMPETING FINANCIAL INTERESTS Ireshyn Govender, Stoyan Stoychev and Justin Jordaan are employed by ReSyn Biosciences, proprietors of MagReSyn® technology. The MacCoss Lab at the University of Washington has a sponsored research agreement with Thermo Fisher Scientific, the manufacturer of the mass spectrometry instrumentation used in this research. Additionally, Michael MacCoss is a paid consultant for Thermo Fisher Scientific.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Accession number :
38617345
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.10.544439