| Literature DB >> 12239277 |
Andrew J Sloane1, Janice L Duff, Nicole L Wilson, Parag S Gandhi, Cameron J Hill, Femia G Hopwood, Paul E Smith, Melissa L Thomas, Robert A Cole, Nicolle H Packer, Edmond J Breen, Patrick W Cooley, David B Wallace, Keith L Williams, Andrew A Gooley.
Abstract
We describe a chemical printer that uses piezoelectric pulsing for rapid, accurate, and non-contact microdispensing of fluid for proteomic analysis of immobilized protein macroarrays. We demonstrate protein digestion and peptide mass fingerprinting analysis of human plasma and platelet proteins direct from a membrane surface subsequent to defined microdispensing of trypsin and matrix solutions, hence bypassing multiple liquid-handling steps. Detection of low abundance, alkaline proteins from whole human platelet extracts has been highlighted. Membrane immobilization of protein permits archiving of samples pre-/post-analysis and provides a means for subanalysis using multiple chemistries. This study highlights the ability to increase sequence coverage for protein identification using multiple enzymes and to characterize N-glycosylation modifications using a combination of PNGase F and trypsin. We also demonstrate microdispensing of multiple serum samples in a quantitative microenzyme-linked immunosorbent assay format to rapidly screen protein macroarrays for pathogen-derived antigens. We anticipate the chemical printer will be a major component of proteomic platforms for high throughput protein identification and characterization with widespread applications in biomedical and diagnostic discovery.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12239277 DOI: 10.1074/mcp.m200020-mcp200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Proteomics ISSN: 1535-9476 Impact factor: 5.911