Quantitative Peptidomics of Mice Lacking Peptide-Processing Enzymes

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Abstract

Peptidomics is defined as the analysis of peptides present in a tissue extract, usually using mass spectrometry-based approaches. Unlike radioimmunoassay-based detection techniques, peptidomics measures the precise form of each peptide, including post-translational modifications, and can readily distinguish between longer and shorter forms of the same peptide. Also, peptidomics is not limited to known peptides and can detect hundreds of peptides in a single experiment. Quantitative peptidomics enables comparisons between two or more groups of samples and is perfect for studies examining the effect of gene knockouts on tissue levels of peptides. We describe the method for quantitative peptidomics using isotopic labels based on trimethylammonium butyrate, which can be synthesized in five different isotopic forms; this permits multivariate analysis of five different groups of tissue extracts in a single liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry run.

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Wardman, J., & Fricker, L. D. (2011). Quantitative Peptidomics of Mice Lacking Peptide-Processing Enzymes. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 768, pp. 307–323). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-204-5_17

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