Evaluation of multiprotein immunoaffnity subtraction for plasma proteomics and candidate biomaker discovery using mass spectrometry

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Abstract

Strategies for removal of high abundance proteins have been increasingly utilized in proteomic studies of serum/plasma and other body fluids to enhance the detection of low abundance proteins and achieve broader proteome coverage; however, both the reproducibility and specificity of the high abundance protein depletion process still represent common concerns. Here we report a detailed evaluation of immunoaffinity subtraction performed applying the ProteomeLab IgY-12 system that is commonly used in human serum/plasma proteome characterization in combination with high resolution LC-MS/MS. Plasma samples were repeatedly processed using this approach, and the resulting flow-through fractions and bound fractions were individually analyzed for comparison. The removal of target proteins by the immunoaffinity subtraction system and the overall process was highly reproducible. Non-target proteins, including one spiked protein standard (rabbit glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase), were also observed to bind to the column at different levels but also in a reproducible manner. The results suggest that multiprotein immunoaffinity subtraction systems can be readily integrated into quantitative strategies to enhance detection of low abundance proteins in biomarker discovery studies.

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Liu, T., Qian, W. J., Mottaz, H. M., Gritsenko, M. A., Norbeck, A. D., Moore, R. J., … Smith, R. D. (2006). Evaluation of multiprotein immunoaffnity subtraction for plasma proteomics and candidate biomaker discovery using mass spectrometry. Molecular and Cellular Proteomics, 5(11), 2167–2174. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.T600039-MCP200

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