Abstract

Immobilized combinatorial peptide libraries have been advocated as a strategy for equalization of the dynamic range of a typical proteome. The technology has been applied predominantly to blood plasma and other biological fluids such as urine, but has not been used extensively to address the issue of dynamic range in tissue samples. Here, we have applied the combinatorial library approach to the equalization of a tissue where there is also a dramatic asymmetry in the range of abundances of proteins; namely, the soluble fraction of skeletal muscle. We have applied QconCAT and label-free methodology to the quantification of the proteins that bind to the beads as the loading is progressively increased. Although some equalization is achieved, and the most abundant proteins no longer dominate the proteome analysis, at high protein loadings a new asymmetry of protein expression is reached, consistent with the formation of complex assembles of heat shock proteins, cytoskeletal elements and other proteins on the beads. Loading at different ionic strength values leads to capture of different subpopulations of proteins, but does not completely eliminate the bias in protein accumulation. These assemblies may impair the broader utility of combinatorial library approaches to the equalization of tissue proteomes. However, the asymmetry in equalization is manifest at either low and high ionic strength values but manipulation of the solvent conditions may extend the capacity of the method.

Highlights

  • The capability of mass spectrometry based proteomics has been greatly enhanced, the challenge of dynamic range is not fully solved

  • The dynamic range of a typical LC-MS/MS analysis is such that it is not feasible to accommodate the range of protein expression levels in a typical tissue preparation

  • We applied the combinatorial equalization library to the soluble proteins of chicken skeletal muscle, a tissue that we have studied previously [31,35,36]

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Summary

Introduction

The capability of mass spectrometry based proteomics has been greatly enhanced, the challenge of dynamic range is not fully solved. In a second series, designed to test the effect of extreme loading of beads, Prospectrum-2 beads, washed as described previously, were exposed to increasing amounts of soluble proteins from chicken skeletal muscle; chicken pectoralis (30 g) tissue was homogenized in 30 mL 20 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.0 containing protease inhibitors (Complete Protease Inhibitors, Roche, Lewes, UK).

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