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1.
MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) enables analysis of peptides along with histology. However, there are several critical steps in MALDI MSI of peptides, 1 of which is spectral quality. Suppression of MALDI matrix clusters by the aid of ammonium salts in MALDI experiments is well known. It is asserted that addition of ammonium salts dissociates potential matrix adducts and thereafter decreases matrix cluster formation. Consequently, MALDI MS sensitivity and mass accuracy increase. Up to our knowledge, a limited number of MALDI MSI studies used ammonium salts as matrix additives to suppress matrix clusters and enhance peptide signals. In this work, we investigated the effect of ammonium phosphate monobasic (AmP) as alpha‐cyano‐4‐hydroxycinnamic acid (α‐CHCA) matrix additive in MALDI MSI of peptides. Prior to MALDI MSI, the effect of varying concentrations of AmP in α‐CHCA was assessed in bovine serum albumin tryptic digests and compared with the control (α‐CHCA without AmP). Based on our data, the addition of AmP as matrix additive decreased matrix cluster formation regardless of its concentration, and specifically, 8 mM AmP and 10 mM AmP increased bovine serum albumin peptide signal intensities. In MALDI MSI of peptides, both 8 and 10 mM AmP in α‐CHCA improved peptide signals especially in the mass range of m/z 2000 to 3000. In particular, 9 peptide signals were found to have differential intensities within the tissues deposited with AmP in α‐CHCA (AUC > 0.60). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first MALDI MSI of peptides work investigating different concentrations of AmP as α‐CHCA matrix additive to enhance peptide signals in formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded (FFPE) tissues. Further, AmP as part of α‐CHCA matrix could enhance protein identifications and support MALDI MSI‐based proteomic approaches.  相似文献   

2.
Manual and automated solvent-free mini-ball mill (MBM) matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) analysis of mixtures of beta-amyloid peptides (1-11), (33-42), (1-42) and non-beta-amyloid component of Alzheimer's disease peptide yielded interpretable spectra for all of the peptides present regardless of their relative amounts in the samples. This was not the case for solvent-based MALDI analysis using traditional acidic aqueous/organic solvent conditions, which resulted in severe over-representation of hydrophilic peptide (1-11) and provided no spectra for insoluble amphiphilic peptide (1-42) even when present at 50% relative molar amount. Less accurate representation of components in mixtures by the traditional method appears to be a combination of poor dissolution of peptides in the solvent and preferential ionization of more hydrophilic peptides in the mixture. Consequently, only MBM provided a complete tryptic map of beta-amyloid (1-42) compared to 67% coverage by traditional MALDI. Acetonitrile (0.1% TFA) led to improved coverage only at a 50% molar ratio of peptide (1-42), but also to a side product of (1-42), Met oxidation (amino acid 35), a phenomenon not observed in MBM MALDI analysis. Traditional MALDI analysis resulted in over-representation of hydrophilic soluble beta-amyloid (1-11) in defined mixtures and autoproteolytic peptides of trypsin. In contrast, over-representation and under-representation were less pronounced in solvent-free MALDI in all of the investigated cases. Analysis of defined peptide and tryptic peptide mixtures showed that MBM MALDI yielded greater qualitative reliability, which also improved quantitative response relative to the solvent-based approach.  相似文献   

3.
A multimodal workflow for mass spectrometry imaging was developed that combines MALDI imaging with protein identification and quantification by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS). Thin tissue sections were analyzed by MALDI imaging, and the regions of interest (ROI) were identified using a smoothing and edge detection procedure. A midinfrared laser at 3‐μm wavelength was used to remove the ROI from the brain tissue section after MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI MSI). The captured material was processed using a single‐pot solid‐phase‐enhanced sample preparation (SP3) method and analyzed by LC‐MS/MS using ion mobility (IM) enhanced data independent acquisition (DIA) to identify and quantify proteins; more than 600 proteins were identified. Using a modified database that included isoform and the post‐translational modifications chain, loss of the initial methionine, and acetylation, 14 MALDI MSI peaks were identified. Comparison of the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathways of the identified proteins was achieved through an evolutionary relationships classification system.  相似文献   

4.
Solid-phase sulfonation of tryptic peptides adsorbed to C18 muZipTips has been carried out to facilitate de novo sequencing with mass spectrometry. Peptides are reacted with the sulfonation reagent while they are still adsorbed to the solid phase. Excess reagent passes through the ZipTip to waste. Washing the products before subsequent elution from the mini-column also affords sample cleanup prior to analysis. Near quantitative N-terminal sulfonation can be achieved reliably at room temperature in only a few seconds. The method has been applied successfully to model peptides and to solution or in-gel digests of proteins. Current sequencing limits are about 100 fmol of protein. Multiplexed sample sulfonation reactions have been carried out with a manual 8-position micropipettor or using centrifugal force to reliably pass reagents and wash solutions over sample-loaded ZipTips. With multiplexing, overall preparation times have been reduced to about 1 min per sample. The solid-phase format facilitates efficient use of precious digest samples by enabling them to be recovered from the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) sample stage after mass fingerprinting, derivatized and re-analyzed by MALDI postsource decay mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

5.
Matrix-assisted laser/desorption ionization (MALDI) mass-spectrometric imaging (MSI), also known as MALDI imaging, is a powerful technique for mapping biological molecules such as endogenous proteins and peptides in human skin tissue sections. A few groups have endeavored to apply MALDI-MSI to the field of skin research; however, a comprehensive article dealing with skin tissue sections and the application of various matrices and enzymes is not available. Our aim is to present a multiplex method, based on MALDI-MSI, to obtain the maximum information from skin tissue sections. Various matrices were applied to skin tissue sections: (1) 9-aminoacridine for imaging metabolites in negative ion mode; (2) sinapinic acid to obtain protein distributions; (3) α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid subsequent to on-tissue enzymatic digestion by trypsin, elastase, and pepsin, respectively, to localize the resulting peptides. Notably, substantial amounts of data were generated from the distributions retrieved for all matrices applied. Several primary metabolites, e.g. ATP, were localized and subsequently identified by on-tissue postsource decay measurements. Furthermore, maps of proteins and peptides derived from on-tissue digests were generated. Identification of peptides was achieved by elution with different solvents, mixing with α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid, and subsequent tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) measurements, thereby avoiding on-tissue MS/MS measurements. Highly abundant peptides were identified, allowing their use as internal calibrants in future MALDI-MSI analyses of human skin tissue sections. Elastin as an endogenous skin protein was identified only by use of elastase, showing the high potential of alternative enzymes. The results show the versatility of MALDI-MSI in the field of skin research. This article containing a methodological perspective depicts the basics for a comprehensive comparison of various skin states.
Figure
Matrix-assisted laser/desorption ionization (MALDI) mass-spectrometric imaging (MSI), also known as MALDI imaging, is a powerful technique for mapping biological molecules in human skin tissue sections. In this body of work, a multiplex method, based on MALDI-MSI, is presented to obtain maximum information from skin tissue sections. Therefore, various matrices were applied to skin tissue sections: (1) 9-aminoacridine (9-AA) for imaging small molecules in negative ion mode; (2) sinapinic acid (SA) to obtain protein distributions; (3) α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (α-HCHA) subsequent to on-tissue enzymatic digestion by trypsin, elastase, and pepsin, respectively, to localize the resulting peptides. Of note, identification of metabolites was achieved by post-source decay (PSD) MALDI, and proteins were identified subsequent to enzymatic digestion via the resulting peptides which were eluted from the skin tissue section and afterwards analyzed with use of a tandem time-of-flight (ToF) mass spectrometer. The application of alternative enzymes, such as pepsin and elastase, is highlighted within this article  相似文献   

6.
Sample pretreatment is key to obtaining good data in matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI‐MSI). Although sublimation is one of the best methods for obtaining homogenously fine organic matrix crystals, its sensitivity can be low due to the lack of a solvent extraction effect. We investigated the effect of incorporating a thin film of metal formed by zirconium (Zr) sputtering into the sublimation process for MALDI matrix deposition for improving the detection sensitivity in mouse liver tissue sections treated with olanzapine. The matrix‐enhanced surface‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (ME‐SALDI) method, where a matrix was formed by sputtering Zr to form a thin nanoparticle layer before depositing MALDI organic matrix comprising α‐cyano‐4‐hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) by sublimation, resulted in a significant improvement in sensitivity, with the ion intensity of olanzapine being about 1800 times that observed using the MALDI method, comprising CHCA sublimation alone. When Zr sputtering was performed after CHCA deposition, however, no such enhancement in sensitivity was observed. The enhanced sensitivity due to Zr sputtering was also observed when the CHCA solution was applied by spraying, being about twice as high as that observed by CHCA spraying alone. In addition, the detection sensitivity of these various pretreatment methods was similar for endogenous glutathione. Given that sample preparation using the ME‐SALDI‐MSI method, which combines Zr sputtering with the sublimation method for depositing an organic matrix, does not involve a solvent, delocalization problems such as migration of analytes observed after matrix spraying and washing with aqueous solutions as sample pretreatment are not expected. Therefore, ME‐Zr‐SALDI‐MSI is a novel sample pretreatment method that can improve the sensitivity of analytes while maintaining high spatial resolution in MALDI‐MSI.  相似文献   

7.
We investigated a variant of desorption/ionization on porous silicon (DIOS) mass spectrometry utilizing an aqueous suspension of either porous silica gel or porous alumina (pore size of 60 and 90 A, respectively). Laser desorption/ionization (LDI) from samples directly deposited on a stainless steel surface without any inorganic substrates was also achieved. Synthetic peptides designed to cover large sequence diversity constituted our model compounds. Sample preparation, including material conditioning, peptide solubilization, and deposition protocol onto standard matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) probe, as well as ionization source tuning were optimized to perform sensitive reproducible LDI analyses. The addition of either a cationizing agent or an alkali metal scavenger to the sample suspension allowed modification of the ionization output. Comparing hydrophilic silica gel to hydrophobic reversed-phase silica gel as well as increasing material pore size provided further insights into desorption/ionization processes. Furthermore, mixtures of peptides were analyzed to probe the spectral suppression phenomenon when no interfering organic matrix was present. The results gathered from synthetic peptide cocktails indicated that LDI mass spectrometry on silica gel or alumina constitutes a promising complementary method to MALDI in proteomics for peptide mass fingerprinting.  相似文献   

8.
Identification of suspects via fingermark analysis is one of the mainstays of forensic science. The success in matching fingermarks, using conventional fingermark scanning and database searching, strongly relies on the enhancement method adopted for fingermark recovery; this in turn depends on the components present in the fingermarks, which will change over time. This work aims to develop a robust methodology for improved analytical detection of the fingermark components. For the first time, matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI‐MSI) has been used to image endogenous lipids from fresh and aged, groomed and ungroomed fingermarks. The methodology was initially developed using oleic acid which was detected along with its degradation products over a 7‐day period, at three different temperatures in a time‐course experiment. The optimised methodology was then transferred to the imaging analysis of real fingermark samples. Fingermark patterns were reconstructed by retrieving the m/z values of oleic acid and its degradation products. This allowed the three aged fingermarks to be distinguished. In order to prove that MALDI‐MSI can be used in a non‐destructive way, a simple washing protocol was adopted which returned a fingermark that could be further investigated with classical forensic approaches. The work reported here proves the potential and the feasibility of MALDI‐MSI for the forensic analysis of fingermarks, thus making it competitive with other MSI techniques such as desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI)‐MS. The feasibility of using MALDI‐MSI in fingermark ageing studies is also demonstrated along with the potential to be integrated into routine fingermark forensic analysis. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
Guanidination of the epsilon-amino group of lysine-terminated tryptic peptides can be accomplished selectively in one step with O-methylisourea hydrogen sulfate. This reaction converts lysine residues into more basic homoarginine residues. It also protects the epsilon-amino groups against unwanted reaction with sulfonation reagents, which can then be used to selectively modify the N-termini of tryptic peptides. The combined reactions convert lysine-terminated tryptic peptides into modified peptides that are suitable for de novo sequencing by postsource decay matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. The guanidination reaction is very pH dependent. Product yields and reaction kinetics were studied in aqueous solution using either NaOH or diisopropylethylamine as the base. Methods are reported for derivatizing and sequencing lysine-terminated tryptic peptides at low pmole levels. The postsource decay (PSD) MALDI tandem mass spectra of a model peptide (VGGYGYGAK), the homoarginine analog and the sulfonated homoarginine analog are compared. These spectra show the influence that each chemical modification has on the peptide fragmentation pattern. Finally, we demonstrate that definitive protein identifications can be achieved by PSD MALDI sequencing of derivatized peptides obtained from solution digests of model proteins and from in-gel digests of 2D-gel separated proteins.  相似文献   

10.
The ability of a thiol‐containing molecule, thiosalicylic acid (TSA), to function as a reactive matrix for matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry analysis of peptides has been investigated. Although TSA has reducing characteristics, the use of TSA did not cause a reduction‐induced MALDI in‐source decay, probably because of the weak interactions between the thiol group in TSA and the carboxyl oxygen in the peptide. In contrast, when peptides containing disulfide bonds were analyzed by MALDI with TSA as the matrix, the disulfide bond was partially cleaved owing to the reaction with TSA, producing TSA‐adducted peptides. The reaction between the disulfide bond and TSA was suggested to be occurred in solution. The comparison of the MALDI mass spectra obtained using conventional matrix and TSA allows us to count the number of disulfide bonds in the peptides. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI MSI) techniques are continually being assessed with a view to improving the quality of information obtained from a given sample. A single tissue section will typically only be analyzed once by MALDI MSI and is then either used for histological staining or discarded. In this study, we explore the idea of repeat analysis of a single tissue section by MALDI MSI as a route toward improving sensitivity, structural characterization, and diversity of detected analyte classes. Repeat analysis of a single tissue section from a fresh frozen mouse brain is investigated with both α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) and para-nitroaniline (PNA). Repeat analysis is then applied to the acquisition of MALDI MSI and MALDI tandem mass spectrometry imaging employing collision induced dissociation (MS/MS imaging employing CID) from a formalin-fixed mouse brain section. Finally, both lipid and protein data are acquired from the same tissue section via repeat analysis utilizing CHCA, sinapinic acid (SA), and a tissue wash step. PNA was found to outperform CHCA as a matrix for repeat analysis; multiple lipids were identified using MS/MS imaging; both lipid and protein images were successfully acquired from a single tissue section.
Figure
Repeat analysis by MALDI MS imaging of a single tissue section is investigated with multiple matrices and tissue washes to provide increased molecular information from a single tissue section  相似文献   

12.
Matrix-assisted ionization vacuum (MAIV) is a novel ionization technique that generates multiply charged ions in vacuum without the use of laser ablation or high voltage. MAIV can be achieved in intermediate-vacuum and high-vacuum matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) sources and electrospray ionization (ESI) sources without instrument modification. Herein, we adapt MAIV onto the MALDI-LTQ-Orbitrap XL platform for biomolecule analysis. As an attractive alternative to MALDI for in solution and in situ analysis of biomolecules, MAIV coupling to high resolution and accurate mass (HRAM) MS instrument has successfully expanded the mass detection range and improved the fragmentation efficiency due to the generation of multiply charged ions. Additionally, the softness of MAIV enables potential application in labile post-translational modification (PTM) analysis. In this study, proteins as large as 18.7 kDa were detected with up to 18 charges; intact peptides with labile PTM were well preserved during the ionization process and characterized MS/MS; peptides and proteins in complex tissue samples were detected and identified both in liquid extracts and in situ. Moreover, we demonstrated that this method facilitates MS/MS analysis with improved fragmentation efficiency compared to MALDI-MS/MS.  相似文献   

13.
Iron oxide nanoparticles modified with oleate have been employed for the extraction of peptides and proteins from aqueous solution before matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometric (MS) analysis. Adsorption of peptides and proteins onto the nanoparticles were mainly through electrostatic attraction and hydrophobic interaction. The analyte-adsorbed iron oxide nanoparticles could be efficiently collected from solution using a magnet. No elution step was needed. With this preconcentration strategy, the lowest detectable concentration of angiotensin I, insulin, and myoglobin in 500 microL of aqueous solution were 0.1 nM, 0.1 nM, and 10.0 nM, respectively. In addition, the nanoparticles could extract the analytes from solution with a high content of salt and surfactant, thus eliminating suppression effect during MALDI MS analysis. This method was successfully applied to concentrate the tryptic digest products of cytochrome c. In addition, the tryptic digestion of cytochrome c can be directly conducted on the iron oxide nanoparticles.  相似文献   

14.
脂质组学概念自2003年被提出以来,其已成为研究生物体、组织或细胞中脂质的结构、功能及代谢途径的一门学科。脂质的种类众多,同时结构非常复杂,脂质的分析充满了困难和挑战。基质辅助激光解吸电离质谱成像(MALDI MSI)分析技术不仅可以进行物质鉴定,而且可对被分析物进行空间分布成像,近年来,该技术广泛地应用于脂质组学的研究。该文介绍了MALDI MSI在脂质组学研究中的样品处理、基质喷涂及应用方面的研究进展,并就目前存在的问题及解决方案进行了探讨,以期扩展MALDI MSI的应用范围。  相似文献   

15.
A method has been developed for rapid and sensitive identification of epitope-containing peptides, based on direct MALDI-MS/MS analysis of epitope-containing peptides affinity bound to affinity beads. This technique provides sequence information of the epitope that allows unambiguous identification of the epitope either by database searching or de novo sequencing. With MALDI-MS, affinity beads with bound peptides can be placed directly on the MALDI target and analyzed. Coupling a MALDI source to an orthogonal injection quadrupole time-of-flight (QqTOF) mass spectrometer allows direct sequencing of the bound peptides. In contrast to ESI-MS/MS, elution of the affinity-bound peptides followed by additional concentration and purification steps is not required, thus reducing the potential for sample loss. Direct mass spectrometric sequencing of affinity-bound peptides eliminates the need for chemical or enzymatic sequencing. Other advantages of this direct MALDI-MS/MS analysis of epitope-containing peptides bound to the affinity beads include its sensitivity (femtomole levels) and speed. In addition, direct analysis of peptides on affinity beads does not adversely affect the high mass accuracy of a QqTOF, and database searching can be performed on the MS/MS spectra obtained. In proof-of-principle experiments, this method has been demonstrated on beads containing immobilized antibodies against phosphotyrosine, the c-myc epitope tag, as well as immobilized avidin. Furthermore, de novo sequencing of epitope-containing peptides is demonstrated. The first application of this method was with anti-FLAG-tag affinity beads, where direct MALDI MS/MS was used to determine an unexpected enzymatic cleavage site on a growth factor protein.  相似文献   

16.
Qualitative and quantitative analysis of post‐translational protein modifications by mass spectrometry is often hampered by changes in the ionization/detection efficiencies caused by amino acid modifications. This paper reports a comprehensive study of the influence of phosphorylation and methylation on the responsiveness of peptides to matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry. Using well‐characterized synthetic peptide mixtures consisting of modified peptides and their unmodified analogs, relative ionization/detection efficiencies of phosphorylated, monomethylated, and dimethylated peptides were determined. Our results clearly confirm that the ion yields are generally lower and the signal intensities are reduced with phosphopeptides than with their nonphosphorylated analogs and that this has to be taken into account in MALDI and ESI mass spectrometry. However, the average reduction of ion yield caused by phosphorylation is more pronounced with MALDI than with ESI. The unpredictable impact of phosphorylation does not depend on the hydrophobicity and net charge of the peptide, indicating that reliable quantification of phosphorylation by mass spectrometry requires the use of internal standards. In contrast to phosphorylation, mono‐ and dimethylated peptides frequently exhibit increased signal intensities in MALDI mass spectrometry (MALDI‐MS). Despite minor matrix‐dependent variability, MALDI methods are well suited for the sensitive detection of dimethylated arginine and lysine peptides. Mono‐ and dimethylation of the arginine guanidino group did not significantly influence the ionization efficiency of peptides in ESI‐MS. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

17.
A new quantitation method for mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) has been developed. In this method, drug concentrations were determined by tissue homogenization of five 10 μm tissue sections adjacent to those analyzed by MSI. Drug levels in tissue extracts were measured by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). The integrated MSI response was correlated to the LC/MS/MS drug concentrations to determine the amount of drug detected per MSI ion count. The study reported here evaluates olanzapine in liver tissue. Tissue samples containing a range of concentrations were created from liver harvested from rats administered a single dose of olanzapine at 0, 1, 4, 8, 16, 30, or 100 mg/kg. The liver samples were then analyzed by MALDI-MSI and LC/MS/MS. The MALDI-MSI and LC/MS/MS correlation was determined for tissue concentrations of ~300 to 60,000 ng/g and yielded a linear relationship over two orders of magnitude (R(2) = 0.9792). From this correlation, a conversion factor of 6.3 ± 0.23 fg/ion count was used to quantitate MSI responses at the pixel level (100 μm). The details of the method, its importance in pharmaceutical analysis, and the considerations necessary when implementing it are presented.  相似文献   

18.
For the first time, we utilized multifunctional nanoparticles composite (NPs composite) for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometric (MALDI-MS) analysis of peptides and proteins. Multiwalled carbon nanotubes doped with Cd(2+) ions and modified with cadmium sulfide NPs were synthesized by a chemical reduction method at room temperature. The multifunctional NPs composite applied for the analysis of peptides and microwave-digested proteins in the atmospheric pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization ion-trap and MALDI time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) was successfully demonstrated. The maximum detection sensitivity for peptides in MALDI-MS was achieved by the adsorption of negatively charged peptides onto the surfaces of NP composite through electrostatic interactions. The optimal conditions of peptide mixtures were obtained at 20 min of incubation time using 1 mg of NPs composite when the pH of the sample solution was kept higher than the pI values of peptides. The potentiality of the NP composite in the preconcentration of peptides was compared with that of the individual NP by calculating the preconcentration factors (PF) and found that the NPs composite showed a 4-6 times of PF than the other NPs. In addition, the NPs composite was also applied as heat-absorbing materials for efficient microwave tryptic digestion of cytochrome c and lysozyme from milk protein in MALDI-TOF-MS analysis. We believe that the use of NPs composite technique would be an efficient and powerful preconcentrating tool for MALDI-MS for the study of proteome research.  相似文献   

19.
3‐Aminoquinoline/α‐cyano‐4‐hydroxycinnamic acid (3AQ/CHCA) is a liquid matrix (LM), which was reported by Kumar et al. in 1996 for matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. It is a viscous liquid and has some advantages of durability of ion generation by a self‐healing surface and quantitative performance. In this study, we found a novel aspect of 3AQ/CHCA as a MALDI matrix, which converges hydrophilic material into the center of the droplet of analyte‐3AQ/CHCA mixture on a MALDI sample target well during the process of evaporation of water derived from analyte solvent. This feature made it possible to separate not only the buffer components, but also the peptides and oligosaccharides from one another within 3AQ/CHCA. The MALDI imaging analyses of the analyte‐3AQ/CHCA droplet indicated that the oligosaccharides and the peptides were distributed in the center and in the whole area around the center of 3AQ/CHCA, respectively. This 'on‐target separation' effect was also applicable to glycoprotein digests such as ribonuclease B. These features of 3AQ/CHCA liquid matrix eliminate the requirement for pretreatment, and reduce sample handling losses thus resulting in the improvement of throughput and sensitivity. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
Mass spectrometry (MS)‐based quantitative proteomics has become a critical component of biological and clinical research for identification of biomarkers that can be used for early detection of diseases. In particular, MS‐based targeted quantitative proteomics has been recently developed for the detection and validation of biomarker candidates in complex biological samples. In such approaches, synthetic reference peptides that are the stable isotope labeled version of proteotypic peptides of proteins to be quantitated are used as internal standards enabling specific identification and absolute quantification of targeted peptides. The quantification of targeted peptides is achieved using the intensity ratio of a native peptide to the corresponding reference peptide whose spike‐in amount is known. However, a manual calculation of the ratios can be time‐consuming and labor‐intensive, especially when the number of peptides to be tested is large. To establish a liquid chromatography/matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization time‐of‐flight tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MALDI TOF/TOF)‐based targeted quantitative proteomics pipeline, we have developed a software named Mass Spectrometry based Quantification (MSQ). This software can be used to automate the quantification and identification of targeted peptides/proteins by the MALDI TOF/TOF platform. MSQ was applied to the detection of a selected group of targeted peptides in pooled human cerebrospinal spinal fluid (CSF) from patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) in comparison with age‐matched control (OC). The results for the automated quantification and identification of targeted peptides/proteins in CSF were in good agreement with results calculated manually. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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