| Literature DB >> 23731183 |
Mridul Kalita1, Takhar Kasumov, Allan R Brasier, Rovshan G Sadygov.
Abstract
The high mass accuracy and resolution of modern mass spectrometers provides new opportunities to employ theoretical peptide distributions in large-scale proteomic studies. We used theoretical distributions to study noise filtering and mass measurement errors and to examine mass-based differentiation of phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated peptides. Only the monoisotopic mass of the experimental precursor ion was necessary for this analysis. We found that peak deviations can be used to characterize the modification states of peptides in a sample. When applied to large-scale proteomic data sets, the peak deviation distribution can be used to filter chemical/electronic noise for singly charged species. Using peak deviation distributions, it is possible to separate the phosphorylated peptides from the nonphosphorylated peptides, enabling evaluation of the phosphoproteome content of a sample. Because this approach is simple, with light computational requirements, the analysis of theoretical peptide distributions has a significant potential for application to phosphoproteome analyses. For our studies we used publicly available data sets from three large-scale proteomic studies.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23731183 PMCID: PMC3758224 DOI: 10.1021/pr4003382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Proteome Res ISSN: 1535-3893 Impact factor: 4.466