Abstract

Despite advancements of data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry (DIA-MS) to provide comprehensive and reproducible proteome profiling, its utility in very low-input samples is limited. Due to different proteome complexities and corresponding peptide ion abundances, the conventional LC-MS/MS acquisition and widely used large-scale DIA libraries may not be suitable for the micro-nanogram samples. In this study, we report a sample size-comparable library-based DIA approach to enhance the proteome coverage of low-input nanoscale samples (i.e., nanogram cells, ∼5-50 cells). By constructing sample size-comparable libraries, 2380 and 3586 protein groups were identified from as low as 0.75 (∼5 cells) and 1.5 ng (∼10 cells), respectively, highlighting one of the highest proteome coverage with good reproducibility (86%-99% in triplicate results). For the 0.75 ng sample (∼5 cells), significantly superior identification (2380 proteins) was achieved by small-size library-based DIA, compared to 1908, 1749, and 107 proteins identified from medium-size and large-size libraries and a lung cancer resource spectral library, respectively. A similar trend was observed using a different instrument and data analysis pipeline, indicating the generalized conclusion of the approach. Furthermore, the small-size library uniquely identified 518 (22%) proteins in the low-abundant region and spans over a 5-order dynamic range. Spectral similarity analysis revealed that the fragmentation ion pattern in the DIA-MS/MS spectra of the dataset and spectral library play crucial roles for mapping low abundant proteins. With these spectral libraries made freely available, the optimized library-based DIA strategy and DIA digital map will advance quantitative proteomics applications for mass-limited samples.

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