酵母
毛细管作用
蛋白质组学
色谱法
计算生物学
化学
纳米技术
生物
材料科学
生物化学
基因
复合材料
作者
Tian Zhang,Ting-Yu Wei,João A. Paulo
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.jproteome.5c00465
摘要
The effective separation of complex peptide mixtures is a cornerstone of mass spectrometry-based proteomics analysis as it enhances the accuracy and depth of proteomic analyses. Here, we compare data sets collected of whole-cell tryptic peptides, which were fractionated by either conventional flame-pulled, C18 packed-bed microcapillary columns or a microfabricated pillar array column (μPAC). Sixteen samples that included four different yeast strains (Δmet6, Δpfk2, Δura2, and wildtype) were analyzed in quadruplicate using data-independent acquisition. Each column enabled the quantification of >4700 proteins, with >95.4% overlap between column formats. The μPAC showed higher MS1 and MS2 signal intensities while maintaining similar peptide characteristics as the capillary column. The capillary column favored slightly longer and more hydrophobic peptides. Both columns achieved high data completeness at the protein level (>95%) and reproducible quantification, with μPAC offering slight improvements. Principal component and correlation analyses confirmed the capture of yeast strain-specific differences, with hierarchical clustering prioritizing strain over column effects. Protein quantification validated gene knockouts in both column formats, demonstrating similar accuracy of quantification. These findings highlight the μPAC as a standardized and robust alternative to capillary columns in proteomic analysis.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI