Abstract
Measurement of broad types of proteins from a small number of cells to single cells would help to better understand the nervous system but requires significant leaps in sensitivity in high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Microanalytical capillary electrophoresis electrospray ionization (CE-ESI) offers a path to ultrasensitive proteomics by integrating scalability with sensitivity. Here, we systematically evaluate performance limitations in this technology to develop a data acquisition strategy with deeper coverage of the neuroproteome from trace amounts of starting materials than traditional dynamic exclusion. During standard data-dependent acquisition (DDA), compact migration challenged the duty cycle of second-stage transitions and redundant targeting of abundant peptide signals lowered their identification success rate. DDA was programmed to progressively exclude a static set of high-intensity peptide signals throughout replicate measurements, essentially forming rungs of a "DDA ladder."The method was tested for 500 pg portions of a protein digest from cultured hippocampal (primary) neurons (mouse), which estimated the total amount of protein from a single neuron. The analysis of 5 ng of protein digest over all replicates, approximating 10 neurons, identified 428 nonredundant proteins (415 quantified), an 35% increase over traditional DDA. The identified proteins were enriched in neuronal marker genes and molecular pathways of neurobiological importance. The DDA ladder enhances CE-HRMS sensitivity to single-neuron equivalent amounts of proteins, thus expanding the analytical toolbox of neuroscience.
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CITATION STYLE
Choi, S. B., Muñoz-Llancao, P., Manzini, M. C., & Nemes, P. (2021). Data-Dependent Acquisition Ladder for Capillary Electrophoresis Mass Spectrometry-Based Ultrasensitive (Neuro)Proteomics. Analytical Chemistry, 93(48), 15964–15972. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.1c03327
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