| Literature DB >> 27330413 |
Maria Hernandez-Valladares1, Elise Aasebø1, Olav Mjaavatten1, Marc Vaudel1, Øystein Bruserud2, Frode Berven1, Frode Selheim1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Satisfactory sample preparation for mass spectrometry-based analysis is a critical step in the proteomics workflow. The quality and reproducibility of sample preparation can determine the coverage and confidence of proteomics results. Up to date, several methodologies have been described to produce suitable peptides for mass spectrometry analysis, followed by strategies for enrichment of post-translational modified peptides, if desired. Among them, the filter-aided sample preparation (FASP) has been introduced as a method to allow for removal of denaturants, reductants, alkylators, lipids and nucleic acids prior to trypsin digestion. Despite the high proteolytic digestion and contaminant removal efficiency described for this method, filter failure and consequently complete sample loss can discourage the use of this approach by the proteomic community.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; FASP; IMAC; Mass spectrometry; Phosphoproteomics; Proteomics; SILAC
Year: 2016 PMID: 27330413 PMCID: PMC4915068 DOI: 10.1186/s12575-016-0043-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Proced Online ISSN: 1480-9222 Impact factor: 3.244
Fig. 1Proteomic and phosphoproteomic workflows. Production of peptides with the FASP method is followed by StageTip fractionation and IMAC-phosphoenrichment to prepare samples for the proteome and phosphoproteome data sets, respectively. Red circles illustrate the phospho group of phosphopeptides
Fig. 2Proteome analysis of three AML patient samples. a Number of quantified protein groups and protein groups quantified with more than one peptide in sample A, B and C are shown at the y-axis to the left; and the number of quantified peptides is shown at the y-axis to the right. b Venn diagrams displaying the quantified peptides in the different SDB-RPS fractions (x1, x2 and bufX) of sample A, B and C. c The nine highest enriched molecular functions (MF) annotated by Funrich in the three samples were compared
Fig. 3Phosphoproteome analysis of three AML patient samples. a Number of quantified phosphopeptides with normalized SILAC ratios by MaxQuant and class I-localized phosphosites. b Distribution of serine-, threonine- and tyrosine-phosphosites; and mono-, di- and multi-phosphopeptides in the quantified phosphoproteome. c Molecular function enrichment analysis using the FunRich database
Fig. 4Picture of a working (right) and failed (left) FASP centrifugal filter. A large volume in the filtrate after a short spin (5 min) helps to identify non-retaining-protein-membrane filters
Troubleshooting
| Problem | Possible reason | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| The centrifugal unit spun all the protein sample. No sample left on the membrane. | Faulty filter | Collect the filtrate and place it onto a new tested and conditioned spin filter |
| Filter membrane displaced due to the tight insertion of the filter into the collection tube | Find a collection tube where a new tested and conditioned filter can be inserted with no friction. Collect the filtrate onto it. | |
| Low peptide recovery in the filtrate (<40 %) | Severe filter clogging | Pipette gently up and down to homogenize when adding a new solution, without touching the filter membrane |