Abstract
An investigation of a multidimensional proteomics workflow composed of off-gel isoelectric focusing (IEF) and superficially porous liquid chromatography (SPLC) with Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) was completed in order to assess various figures of merit associated with intact protein measurements. Triplicate analysis performed at both high and low FTMS resolutions on the E. coli proteome resulted in a900 redundant proteoforms from 3 to 95 kDa. Normalization of the chromatographic axis to identified proteoforms enabled reproducible physicochemical property measurements between proteome replicates with inter-replicate variances of ±3 ppm mass error for proteoforms <30 kDa, ±1.1 Da for proteins >30 kDa, ±12 s retention time error, and ±0.21 pI units. The results for E. coli and standard proteins revealed a correlation between pI precision and proteoform abundance with species detected in multiple IEF fractions exhibiting pI precisions less than the theoretical resolution of the off-gel system (±0.05 vs ±0.17, respectively). Evaluation of differentially modified proteoforms of standard proteins revealed that high sample loads (100s μgrams) change the IEF pH gradient profile, leading to sample broadening that facilitates resolution of charged post-translational modifications (e.g., phosphorylation, sialylation). Despite the impact of sample load on IEF resolution, results on standard proteins measured directly or after being spiked into E. coli demonstrated that the reproducibility of the workflow permitted recombination of the MS signal across IEF fractions in a manner supporting the evaluation of three label-free quantitation metrics for intact protein studies (proteoforms, proteoform ratios, and protein) over 102-103 sample amount with low femtomole detection limits.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 346-354 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 6 2021 |
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award No. 1R01GM115739-01A1. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. This work was also supported by the Multiple Sclerosis Society (PP-1503-04034), The Darrel K. Royal Research Fund for Alzheimer’s Disease (48680-DKR), The Texas Alzheimer’s Research and Care Consortium Investigator Grant Program (354091), and the UT System Neuroscience and Neurotechnology Research Institute (363027). Funding was also provided by the University of Texas at Dallas, the John L. Roach Scholarship in Biomedical Research, and the Friends of Alzheimer’s Disease Research Award.
Keywords
- chromatography
- isoelectric focusing
- label-free quantitation
- mass spectrometry
- proteoform
- reversed-phase
- top-down
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Structural Biology
- Spectroscopy