| Literature DB >> 23365751 |
Abstract
Quantitative protein measurements by mass spectrometry have gained wide acceptance in research settings. However, clinical uptake of mass spectrometric protein assays has not followed suit. In part, this is due to the long-standing acceptance by regulatory agencies of immunological assays such as ELISA assays. In most cases, ELISAs provide highly accurate, sensitive, relatively inexpensive, and simple assays for many analytes. The barrier to acceptance of mass spectrometry in these situations will remain high. However, mass spectrometry provides solutions to certain protein measurements that are difficult, if not impossible, to accomplish by immunological methods. Cases where mass spectrometry can provide solutions to difficult assay development include distinguishing between very closely related protein species and monitoring biological and analytical variability due to sample handling and very high multiplexing capacity. This paper will highlight several examples where mass spectrometry has made certain protein measurements possible where immunological techniques have had a great difficulty.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23365751 PMCID: PMC3556832 DOI: 10.1155/2013/219452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Proteomics ISSN: 2090-2166
Amino acid substitutions in Apolipoprotein E Isoforms.
| Isoform | Amino acid at | Amino acid at |
|---|---|---|
| Apo E2 | Cys | Cys |
| Apo E3 | Cys | Arg |
| Apo E4 | Arg | Cys |