Mass spectrometric identification of endogenous peptides

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Abstract

Peptidomics is an emerging field focused in the analysis of endogenous peptides. Naturally occurring peptides are often endogenously produced protein fragments. Cleavage of precursor proteins by proteases generates peptides that may gain specialized functions not ascribed to their precursors, and which could reflect the state of a cell under certain physiological conditions or pathological processes. Since peptides are found in complex matrices (e.g., serum, tear, urine, cerebrospinal fluid), they need to be isolated from the matrix and concentrated before they can be analyzed on mass spectrometry. This chapter describes methods for sample preparation prior to mass spectrometry analysis. In addition, different peptide fragmentation techniques are described which are complementary when analyzing naturally occurring peptides by liquid chromatography coupled online to tandem mass spectrometry.

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Azkargorta, M., Escobes, I., Iloro, I., & Elortza, F. (2018). Mass spectrometric identification of endogenous peptides. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1719, pp. 59–70). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7537-2_4

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