Two-dimensional separation of human plasma proteins using iterative free-flow electrophoresis

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Abstract

Blood plasma is the most complex human-derived proteome, containing other tissue proteomes as subsets. This proteome has only been partially characterized due to the extremely wide dynamic range of the plasma proteins of more than ten orders of magnitude. Thus, the reduction in sample complexity prior to mass spectrometric analysis is particularly important and alternative separation methodologies are required to more effectively mine the lower abundant plasma proteins. Here, we demonstrated a novel separation approach using 2-D free-flow electrophoresis (FFE) separating proteins and peptides in solution according to their pI prior to LC-MS/MS. We used the combination of sequential protein and peptide separation by first separating the plasma proteins into specific FFE fractions. Tryptic digests of the separated proteins were generated and subsequently separated using FFE. The protein separation medium was optimized to segregate albumin into specific fractions containing only few other proteins. An optimization of throughput for the protein separation reduced the separation time of 1 mL of plasma to approximately 3 h providing sufficient material for digestion and the subsequent peptide separation. Our approach revealed low-abundant proteins (e.g., L-selectin at 17 ng/mL and vascular endothelial-cadherin precursor at 30 ng/mL) and several tissue leakage products, thus providing a powerful orthogonal separation step in the proteomics workflow. © 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.

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Nissum, M., Kuhfuss, S., Hauptmann, M., Obermaier, C., Sukop, U., Wildgruber, R., … Malmström, J. (2007). Two-dimensional separation of human plasma proteins using iterative free-flow electrophoresis. Proteomics, 7(23), 4218–4227. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200700166

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