Using SILAC to Develop Quantitative Data-Independent Acquisition (DIA) Proteomic Methods

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Abstract

Proteins are integral to biological systems and functions. Identifying and quantifying proteins can therefore offer systems-wide insights into protein–protein interactions, cellular signaling, and biological pathway activity. The use of quantitative proteomics has become a method of choice for identifying and quantifying proteins in complex matrices. Proteomics allows researchers to survey hundreds to thousands of proteins in a less biased manner than classical antibody-based protein capture strategies. Typically, discovery approaches have used data-dependent acquisition (DDA) methods, but this approach suffers from stochasticity that compromises quantitation. Recent developments in data-independent acquisition (DIA) proteomics workflows enable proteomic profiling of thousands of samples with increased peak picking consistency making it an excellent candidate for discovering and assessing biomarkers in clinical samples. However, quantitation of peptides from DIA datasets is computationally intensive, and guidelines on how to establish DIA methods are lacking. Method development and optimization require novel tools to visualize and filter DIA datasets appropriately. Here, a protocol and novel script workflow for the optimization of quantitative DIA methods using stable isotope labeling of amino acids in culture (SILAC) are presented. This protocol includes steps for cell growth and labeling, peptide digestion and preparation, and optimization of quantitative DIA methods. In addition, important steps for (1) computational analysis to identify and quantify peptides, (2) data visualizations to identify the linear abundance ranges for all peptides in the sample, and (3) descriptions of how to find high confidence quantitation abundance thresholds are described herein.

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Casavant, E. P., Liang, J., Sankhe, S., Mathews, W. R., & Anania, V. G. (2023). Using SILAC to Develop Quantitative Data-Independent Acquisition (DIA) Proteomic Methods. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2603, pp. 245–257). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2863-8_20

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