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Accuracy and Reproducibility in Quantification of Plasma Protein Concentrations by Mass Spectrometry without the Use of Isotopic Standards

Authors :
Johannes P. C. Vissers
Jan P. van Straalen
Auguste Sturk
Robert J. Beynon
Yvonne Woolerton
Nick Dekker
James I. Langridge
Gert Jan Kramer
Johannes M. F. G. Aerts
Dave Speijer
Other departments
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Laboratory for General Clinical Chemistry
Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Medical Biochemistry
Tytgat Institute for Liver and Intestinal Research
Specialized Hematology
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, 10(10). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, 10(10), e0140097, PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 10, p e0140097 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2015.

Abstract

Background Quantitative proteomic analysis with mass spectrometry holds great promise for simultaneously quantifying proteins in various biosamples, such as human plasma. Thus far, studies addressing the reproducible measurement of endogenous protein concentrations in human plasma have focussed on targeted analyses employing isotopically labelled standards. Non-targeted proteomics, on the other hand, has been less employed to this end, even though it has been instrumental in discovery proteomics, generating large datasets in multiple fields of research. Results Using a non-targeted mass spectrometric assay (LCMSE), we quantified abundant plasma proteins (43 mg/mL—40 ug/mL range) in human blood plasma specimens from 30 healthy volunteers and one blood serum sample (ProteomeXchange: PXD000347). Quantitative results were obtained by label-free mass spectrometry using a single internal standard to estimate protein concentrations. This approach resulted in quantitative results for 59 proteins (cut off ≥11 samples quantified) of which 41 proteins were quantified in all 31 samples and 23 of these with an inter-assay variability of ≤ 20%. Results for 7 apolipoproteins were compared with those obtained using isotope-labelled standards, while 12 proteins were compared to routine immunoassays. Comparison of quantitative data obtained by LCMSE and immunoassays showed good to excellent correlations in relative protein abundance (r = 0.72–0.96) and comparable median concentrations for 8 out of 12 proteins tested. Plasma concentrations of 56 proteins determined by LCMSE were of similar accuracy as those reported by targeted studies and 7 apolipoproteins quantified by isotope-labelled standards, when compared to reference concentrations from literature. Conclusions This study shows that LCMSE offers good quantification of relative abundance as well as reasonable estimations of concentrations of abundant plasma proteins.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a85679d111c89e8649b7bfa5381f2945
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140097