| Literature DB >> 19374746 |
Geert Zegels1, Geert A A Van Raemdonck, Edmond P Coen, Wiebren A A Tjalma, Xaveer W M Van Ostade.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical-vaginal fluid (CVF) plays an important role in the prevention of gynecological infections, although little is known about the contribution of CVF proteins to the immunity of the lower female genital tract. In order to analyze the protein composition of human CVF, we used CVF samples that are routinely collected during colposcopy, but are usually discarded. Since these samples are available in large quantities we aimed to analyze their usefulness for proteomics experiments. The samples were analyzed using different prefractionation techniques (ultrafiltration and C4(RP)-LC protein separation) followed by C18(RP)-LC peptide separation and identification by MALDI-TOF-TOF mass spectrometry. To determine the reproducibility of this proteomics platform we analyzed three technical replicates. Using spectral counting, protein abundances were estimated in a semiquantitative way. We also compared the results obtained in this study with those from previous studies derived from patients with different physiological conditions in order to determine an overlapping protein set.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19374746 PMCID: PMC2678104 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5956-7-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Figure 1Overview of the different workflows used. 7 samples were divided over 3 experimental setups using different fractionation techniques (ultrafiltration and reversed phase (C4)-LC protein fractionation). All processes ended with a C18-LC separation on peptide level and MALDI-TOF-TOF MS/MS analysis.
Overview of the number of spectra collected and MASCOT search results before and after manual data inspection.
| 6351 | 312 | 147 | |
| 10514 | 424 | 201 | |
| 9063 | 364 | 179 | |
| 7630 | 194 | 85 | |
| 9711 | 329 | 164 | |
| 6880 | 210 | 129 |
For each sample the number of spectra collected (column 1), the number of proteins which were identified by Mascot with a score which corresponded with a p-value < 0.05, before (column 2) and after (column 3) our manual data analysis, are presented.
Overview of the number of proteins identified in the different experimental setups showing the interexperimental overlap.
| 130 | ||||||||
| 126 | 152 | |||||||
| 147 | 201 | 178 | ||||||
| 48 | 53 | 50 | 55 | |||||
| 87 | 103 | 93 | 109 | 49 | ||||
| 94 | 112 | 100 | 118 | 85 | 164 | |||
| 87 | 95 | 91 | 103 | 48 | 79 | 84 |
Figure 2Overlap of protein identifications between three technical replicates.
Figure 3Comparison of spectral counting information from different studies.
Figure 4Overlap of protein identifications between the four most comprehensive studies on CVF. Orange and red areas contain proteins which are present in at least 3 out of 4 studies and were included in the overlapping protein set (136 proteins).
Overview of studies performed on human CVF.
| Venkataraman | Undiluted CVF collected in cup from healthy women (postmenarcheal, pre-menopausal) | Cationic fraction | 2D-PAGE (1D: AU-PAGE; 2D: Tricine- SDS-PAGE) | MALDI-TOF-TOF |
| Di Quinzio | Swabs from pregnant women (37 weeks gestation) | Only protein spots identified common to five gels | 2D-PAGE (1stD: IEF; 2ndD SDS-PAGE) followed by RP-LC | MALDI-TOF or ESI-linear IT |
| Dasari | Swabs from pregnant women (18,5 weeks gestation as mean) | Whole CVF | 1D-SDS-PAGE followed by offline 2D(SCX/RP)-LC | ESI-Q-TOF |
| Tang | Washings from clinically normal women; 7 washings from women infected with | Whole CVF | 2D-PAGE (1stD: IEF; 2ndD SDS-PAGE) | MALDI-TOF-TOF |
| Shaw | Gauze from healthy women | Whole CVF | 1D-SDS-PAGE or SCX-LC both followed by RP-LC | ESI-linear IT |
| Pereira | Swabs from pregnant women (15.8–35.9 weeks gestation) | Whole CVF | 2D-DIGE or MudPIT(SCX/RP)-LC | ESI-Q-TOF |
| Klein | Swabs from pregnant women (30.5 weeks gestation as mean) | Whole CVF | RP-LC | ESI-IT |
| This study | Washings from HPV-infected women | Whole CVF | Ultrafiltration or C4-LC protein fractionation/C18-LC peptide separation | MALDI-TOF-TOF |
For each study the following information is presented: 1) the nature of the samples which were used in the study (sample collection method and patient physiology), 2) whether the study focused on a particular part of the sample or analyzed the whole CVF, 3) the methods used to separate proteins and peptides and 4) MS method used for analysis.
Figure 5Fold changes of functional categories between the total proteome and the overlapping protein set. The total proteome (A) and the overlapping protein set (B) were classified into functional categories and the fold change of the different functional classes between these two sets was calculated as follows: percentage of a specific category of the overlapping protein set divided by the percentage of that category in the total proteome (C).
Figure 6Fold changes of cellular localization categories between the total proteome and the overlapping protein set. The total proteome (A) and the overlapping protein set (B) were classified according to the cellular localization (respectively A en B) and the fold change of the different functional classes between these two sets was calculated as follows: percentage of a specific category of the overlapping protein set divided by the percentage of that category in the total proteome (C).