| Literature DB >> 28250403 |
Barbara Deracinois1,2,3, Christophe Flahaut4,5,6, Sophie Duban-Deweer7,8,9, Yannis Karamanos10,11,12.
Abstract
Proteomics became a key tool for the study of biological systems. The comparison between two different physiological states allows unravelling the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in a biological process. Proteomics can confirm the presence of proteins suggested by their mRNA content and provides a direct measure of the quantity present in a cell. Global and targeted proteomics strategies can be applied. Targeted proteomics strategies limit the number of features that will be monitored and then optimise the methods to obtain the highest sensitivity and throughput for a huge amount of samples. The advantage of global proteomics strategies is that no hypothesis is required, other than a measurable difference in one or more protein species between the samples. Global proteomics methods attempt to separate quantify and identify all the proteins from a given sample. This review highlights only the different techniques of separation and quantification of proteins and peptides, in view of a comparative and quantitative global proteomics analysis. The in-gel and off-gel quantification of proteins will be discussed as well as the corresponding mass spectrometry technology. The overview is focused on the widespread techniques while keeping in mind that each approach is modular and often recovers the other.Entities:
Keywords: electrophoresis; fluorescent dies; isotope labelling; proteins and peptides; proteomics; proteomics: methods
Year: 2013 PMID: 28250403 PMCID: PMC5302699 DOI: 10.3390/proteomes1030180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomes ISSN: 2227-7382
Figure 1Flowchart of the most currently used techniques in view of a comparative and quantitative proteomics approach using a protein-based approach (panel A) or a peptide-based approach (panel B). The proteomic analysis is made up of four steps: (i) sample conditioning (not illustrated); (ii) sample preparation; (iii) separation; and (iv) quantification and identification of the proteins. The separation can be performed on proteins or peptides, by electrophoresis or chromatography. The quantification is possible either in-gel or off-gel, whereas the identification is always performed by MS. MS, mass spectrometry; HPLC: high performance liquid chromatography; IEF: isoelectric focusing; PAGE: polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; PMF: peptide mass fingerprint; PFF: peptide fragmentation fingerprint.
Different methods used for the staining or labelling of proteins in view of in-gel quantification(Protein-based quantification) a.
| Advantages | Drawbacks | Robustness for large scale analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| none | ||||
|
| DIGE (cyanine) | Great linearity, sensitivity and reproducibility; MS-compatible | Expensive | Yes | |
|
| none | ||||
|
| Silver staining, Zinc, Copper (metal-based) | Great sensitivity | Low reproducibility, linearity, and accuracy; Low MS compatibility, influenced by external factors | No | |
| CBB, ‘blue-silver’ (organic dyes) | Reproducibility, good linearity, good accuracy, MS-compatible | Moderate sensitivity | Yes | ||
|
| Sypro®, RuBPs, ASCQ_Ru, IrBPS (metal chelates) | Very good reproducibility, good linearity, great sensitivity, non-covalent labelling | Expensive | Yes | |
| Deep PurpleTM, FlamingoTM, KryptonTM (Organic dyes) | |||||
|
| ProQdiamond, ProQemerald | Very good linearity, good sensitivity | Expensive | Yes |
a DIGE, Difference gel electrophoresis; PTM, post translational modifications; CBB, Coomassie brilliant blue; RuBPs, Ruthenium (II) tris (4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenatrolin disulfonate); ASCQ_Ru, ruthenium complex ((bis(2,2'-bipyridine)-4'-methyl-4-carboxybipyridine-ruthenium-N-succidimyl ester-bis(hexafluorophosphate); IrBPS, biscyclometalated iridium(III) complexes with an ancillary bathophenanthroline disulfonate ligand.
Figure 2Comparison of the proteins extracted with Triton X-100 from bovine brain capillary endothelial cells showing limited (Lim. BBB) (A) or re-induced (Re-ind. BBB) BBB functionalities (B). Digital image obtained after 2D-PAGE of the proteins separated according to their pI and MW. The gel was silver nitrate stained. The numbering corresponds to the enriched protein in each condition. Each spot was identified by peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) and/or peptide fragmentation fingerprinting (PFF) on a Proteineer TM workstation (adapted with permission from [45]).
A representative sample among the proteins identified during 2D-PAGE. The proteins were extracted with Triton X-100 from bovine brain capillary endothelial cells with limited (Lim. BBB) or re-induced (Re-ind. BBB) BBB functionalities. The Table illustrates the presence of one spot for one protein, multiple proteins for one spot and/or multiple spots for one protein. The identifications were done by PMF and PFF after MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry. Proteins over-abundant in Lim. BBB are highlighted in grey. The data were reproduced with permission from [45].
| Spot number | Protein Name | Swiss-Prot Accession | Theoretical | Experimental | PMF Mascot Score c | Sequence Coverage (%) | Matched/ Unmatched peptides | Identification by MS or MS/MS | Number of fragmented peptides | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MW (kDa) a | pI b | MW (kDa) a | pI b | |||||||||
|
| 45 | Serine-threonine kinase receptor-associated protein | STRAP_BOVIN | 38.4 | 4.99 | 40.5 | 4.90 | 242 | 67 | 21/25 | MS | |
| 47 | Inorganic pyrophosphatase | IPYR_BOVIN | 32.8 | 5.27 | 39.7 | 5.09 | 168 | 42 | 12/14 | MS | ||
| 58 | Phosphatidylinositol transfer protein alpha isoform | PIPNA_BOVIN | 31.8 | 6.12 | 34.8 | 5.54 | 73 | 28 | 8/15 | MS | ||
| 72 | 6-phosphogluconolactonase | 6PGL_BOVIN | 27.6 | 5.57 | 29.9 | 5.44 | 129 | 40 | 10/19 | MS & MS/MS | 1 | |
| 78 | Apolipoprotein A-I precursor (Apo-AI) | APOA1_BOVIN | 30.2 | 5.71 | 26.2 | 5.52 | 366 | 68 | 25/16 | MS | ||
| 79 | Sorcin | SORCN_HUMAN | 21.7 | 5.32 | 24.1 | 4.98 | 153 | 48 | 15/28 | MS | ||
|
| 36 | Actin, cytoplasmic 1 (Beta-actin) | ACTB_BOVIN | 41.7 | 5.29 | 44.2 | 5.52 | 94 | 44 | 13/50 | MS & MS/MS | 1 |
| Succinyl-CoA ligase [GDP-forming] beta-chain, mitochondrial [Precursor] | SUCB2_BOVIN | 46.7 | 7.51 | 44.2 | 5.52 | 112 | 28 | 14/49 | MS/MS | 1 | ||
| 37 | Actin, cytoplasmic 1 (Beta-actin) | ACTB_BOVIN | 41.7 | 5.29 | 44.2 | 5.66 | 80 | 44 | 14/91 | MS | ||
| Leukocyte elastase inhibitor | ILEU_BOVIN | 42.2 | 5.70 | 44.2 | 5.66 | 134 | 49 | 22/83 | MS | |||
| Succinyl-CoA ligase [ADP-forming] beta-chain, mitochondrial [Precursor] | SUCB1_BOVIN | 50.0 | 6.73 | 44.2 | 5.66 | 100 | 44 | 20/85 | MS | |||
|
| 67 | Chloride intracellular channel protein 4 | CLIC4_BOVIN | 28.7 | 5.6 | 30.9 | 5.42 | 159 | 68 | 19/47 | MS | |
| 70 | Chloride intracellular channel protein 4 | CLIC4_BOVIN | 28.7 | 5.6 | 30.2 | 5.69 | 288 | 81 | 22/14 | MS | ||
| 13 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 57.0 | 4.91 | 233 | 56 | 23/16 | MS & MS/MS | 1 | |
| 16 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 52.3 | 4.82 | 373 | 78 | 45/48 | MS & MS/MS | 3 | |
| 39 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 42.5 | 4.55 | 296 | 69 | 37/39 | MS & MS/MS | 1 | |
| 40 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 41.7 | 4.54 | 228 | 57 | 29/37 | MS & MS/MS | 1 | |
| 41 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 43.1 | 4.53 | 118 | 33 | 10/11 | MS | ||
| 64 | Vimentin (Fragment) | VIME_BOVIN | 17.2 | 9.92 | 32.2 | 5.16 | 89 | 27 | 11/19 | MS | ||
| 65 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 31.6 | 5.38 | 265 | 42 | 34/43 | MS & MS/MS | 4 | |
| 66 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 35.3 | 5.16 | 205 | 42 | 21/16 | MS | ||
| 76 | Vimentin | VIME_BOVIN | 53.7 | 5.06 | 26.7 | 4.50 | 110 | 32 | 12/20 | MS & MS/MS | 1 | |
a Molecular weight; b Isoelectric point; c Score correspond to the measures of certainty (p-values <0.05).
Figure 32D-like view illustrating the distribution of the peptides according to their retention time vs. their m/z ratio. (A) print-screen image obtained from Warp-LC Survey Viewer (Bruker Daltonics) after RP-HPLC-MALDI-TOF-MS analysis of tryptic peptides issued from the enzymatic digestion of a sample of proteins extracted from brain capillary endothelial cells; (B) detail of a particular region; (C) selection of an ion; (D) fragmentation and identification of the peptide (unpublished data from the authors’ laboratory).
Figure 4Differences between label free quantification (A) and quantification by means of stable-isotope labelling (B). The label free quantification consists of two analyses carried out independently before their comparison. The quantification by means of stable-isotope labelling allows the direct comparison of isotope-labelled peptide pairs. LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography coupled to tandem MS. (Adapted from [69], Creative Common Attribution License CC-BY).
Chemical and enzymatic labelling of proteins or peptides a.
| Reactive groups | Methods | Targets | Amino Acids | nb of samples | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ICAT | proteins | cysteine | 2 | [ |
| ALICE | proteins | cysteine | 2 | [ | |
| Photocleavable-ICAT | proteins | cysteine | 2 | [ | |
| proteins | cysteine | 2 | [ | ||
| acrylamide or vinylpyridine | proteins | cysteine | 2 | [ | |
|
| ICPL | proteins | N-term/Lys | 2,3,4 | [ |
| Post-digest ICPL | peptides | N-term/Lys | 2 | [ | |
| iTRAQ | peptides | N-term/Lys | 2,4,8 | [ | |
| /proteins | [ | ||||
| TMT | peptides | N-term/Lys | 2,6 | [ | |
| Dimethyl | peptides | N-term/Lys | 2,4 | [ | |
|
| EMOS | proteins | C-term | 2 | [ |
| peptides | C-term | 2 | [ | ||
| AMOS | peptides | C-term | 2 | [ | |
| Methanol | peptides | C-term/ | 2 | [ | |
| Asp/Glu |
a ICPL, isotope-coded protein label; TMT, tandem mass tags; ICAT, isotope-coded affinity tags; iTRAQ, isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification; ALICE, acid-labile isotope-coded extractants; EMOS, enzyme mediated oxygen substitution; AMOS, acid mediated oxygen substitution.
Different methods used for the labelling of proteins or peptides in view of off-gel quantification(Peptide based quantification) a.
| Advantages | Drawbacks | Robustness for large scale analysis | Exemples of use | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15N, 13C, | Accuracy | Limited to cells in culture,time-consuming | Yes | Cells in culture | ||
| SILAC, CIDTs, superSILAC, SILAM | ||||||
|
| ICPL, iTRAQ, TMT, ICAT, ALICE, dimethyl | Sample complexity | Low sequence recovery | All types of biological sample (regardless of the protein quantity needed) | ||
|
| H218O | Simplified signal analysis, low cost | Late labelling | |||
|
| ICAT, iTRAQ, ICPL, ALICE, TMT | High sequence recovery | ||||
| dimethyl, GIST | ||||||
| Comparison of mass spectra | Sample number, low cost | Separations normalisation, signal alignment | Yes | All types of biological sample | ||
| Spectral counting | ||||||
| AQUA | Easy to use | Cost of internal standard, analysis of one or few proteins | No(too expensive) | Validation of biomarkers | ||
| QconCAT | Enzymatic digestion take into account | |||||
| PSAQ | ||||||
| SRM / MRM | High sensitivity and reproducibility |
a SILAC, stable isotope labelling by amino acids in cell culture; CDIT, culture-derived isotope tags; SILAM, stable isotope labelling of mammal; ICPL, isotope-coded protein label; TMT, tandem mass tags; ICAT, isotope-coded affinity tags; iTRAQ, isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification; ALICE, acid-labile isotope-coded extractants; GIST, global internal standard technology; Coomassie brilliant blue; XIC, extracted ion chromatogram; AQUA, absolute quantification of proteins; QconCAT, absolute quantification using artificial proteins of concatenated signature peptides; PSAQ, protein standard for absolute quantification; IMAC, immobilised metal affinity chromatography.