Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage

Abstract Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is in direct contact with the central nervous system. This makes human CSF an attractive source of potential biomarkers for neurologic diseases. Similarly to blood plasma, proteomic analysis of CSF is complicated by a high dynamic range of individual protein concen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eliska Jankovska, Marek Svitek, Karel Holada, Jiri Petrak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:Clinical Proteomics
Subjects:
CNS
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12014-019-9229-1
id doaj-79ea830e55dc4f80879df74467aa97bd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-79ea830e55dc4f80879df74467aa97bd2020-11-25T01:29:15ZengBMCClinical Proteomics1542-64161559-02752019-02-0116111010.1186/s12014-019-9229-1Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverageEliska Jankovska0Marek Svitek1Karel Holada2Jiri Petrak3BIOCEV, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles UniversityDepartment of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles UniversityInstitute of Immunology and Microbiology, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles UniversityBIOCEV, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles UniversityAbstract Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is in direct contact with the central nervous system. This makes human CSF an attractive source of potential biomarkers for neurologic diseases. Similarly to blood plasma, proteomic analysis of CSF is complicated by a high dynamic range of individual protein concentrations and by the presence of several highly abundant proteins. To deal with the abundant human CSF proteins, methods developed for blood plasma/serum are routinely used. Multiple affinity removal systems and protein enrichment of less abundant proteins using a combinatorial peptide ligand library are among the most frequent approaches. However, their relative impact on CSF proteome coverage has never been evaluated side-by-side in a single study. Therefore, we explored the effect of CSF depletion using MARS 14 cartridge and ProteoMiner ligand library on the number of CSF proteins identified in subsequent LC–MS/MS analysis. LC–MS/MS analysis of crude (non-treated) CSF provided roughly 500 identified proteins. Depletion of CSF by MARS 14 cartridge increased the number of identifications to nearly 800, while treatment of CSF using ProteoMiner enabled identification of 600 proteins. To explore the potential losses of CSF proteins during the depletion process, we also analyzed the “waste” fractions generated by both methods, i.e., proteins retained by the MARS 14 cartridge, and the molecules present in the flow-through fraction from ProteoMiner. More than 250 proteins were bound to MARS 14 cartridge, 100 of those were not identified in the corresponding depleted CSF. Similarly, analysis of the waste fraction in ProteoMiner workflow provided almost 70 unique proteins not found in the CSF depleted by the ligand library. Both depletion strategies significantly increased the number of identified CSF proteins compared to crude CSF. However, MARS 14 depletion provided a markedly higher number of identified proteins (773) compared to ProteoMiner (611). Further, we showed that CSF proteins are lost due to co-depletion (MARS 14) or exclusion (ProteoMiner) during the depletion process. This suggests that the routinely discarded “waste” fractions contain proteins of potential interest and should be included in CSF biomarker studies.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12014-019-9229-1Cerebrospinal fluidDepletionCNSBiomarkersLC–MS/MSMass spectrometry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eliska Jankovska
Marek Svitek
Karel Holada
Jiri Petrak
spellingShingle Eliska Jankovska
Marek Svitek
Karel Holada
Jiri Petrak
Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
Clinical Proteomics
Cerebrospinal fluid
Depletion
CNS
Biomarkers
LC–MS/MS
Mass spectrometry
author_facet Eliska Jankovska
Marek Svitek
Karel Holada
Jiri Petrak
author_sort Eliska Jankovska
title Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
title_short Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
title_full Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
title_fullStr Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
title_full_unstemmed Affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
title_sort affinity depletion versus relative protein enrichment: a side-by-side comparison of two major strategies for increasing human cerebrospinal fluid proteome coverage
publisher BMC
series Clinical Proteomics
issn 1542-6416
1559-0275
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is in direct contact with the central nervous system. This makes human CSF an attractive source of potential biomarkers for neurologic diseases. Similarly to blood plasma, proteomic analysis of CSF is complicated by a high dynamic range of individual protein concentrations and by the presence of several highly abundant proteins. To deal with the abundant human CSF proteins, methods developed for blood plasma/serum are routinely used. Multiple affinity removal systems and protein enrichment of less abundant proteins using a combinatorial peptide ligand library are among the most frequent approaches. However, their relative impact on CSF proteome coverage has never been evaluated side-by-side in a single study. Therefore, we explored the effect of CSF depletion using MARS 14 cartridge and ProteoMiner ligand library on the number of CSF proteins identified in subsequent LC–MS/MS analysis. LC–MS/MS analysis of crude (non-treated) CSF provided roughly 500 identified proteins. Depletion of CSF by MARS 14 cartridge increased the number of identifications to nearly 800, while treatment of CSF using ProteoMiner enabled identification of 600 proteins. To explore the potential losses of CSF proteins during the depletion process, we also analyzed the “waste” fractions generated by both methods, i.e., proteins retained by the MARS 14 cartridge, and the molecules present in the flow-through fraction from ProteoMiner. More than 250 proteins were bound to MARS 14 cartridge, 100 of those were not identified in the corresponding depleted CSF. Similarly, analysis of the waste fraction in ProteoMiner workflow provided almost 70 unique proteins not found in the CSF depleted by the ligand library. Both depletion strategies significantly increased the number of identified CSF proteins compared to crude CSF. However, MARS 14 depletion provided a markedly higher number of identified proteins (773) compared to ProteoMiner (611). Further, we showed that CSF proteins are lost due to co-depletion (MARS 14) or exclusion (ProteoMiner) during the depletion process. This suggests that the routinely discarded “waste” fractions contain proteins of potential interest and should be included in CSF biomarker studies.
topic Cerebrospinal fluid
Depletion
CNS
Biomarkers
LC–MS/MS
Mass spectrometry
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12014-019-9229-1
work_keys_str_mv AT eliskajankovska affinitydepletionversusrelativeproteinenrichmentasidebysidecomparisonoftwomajorstrategiesforincreasinghumancerebrospinalfluidproteomecoverage
AT mareksvitek affinitydepletionversusrelativeproteinenrichmentasidebysidecomparisonoftwomajorstrategiesforincreasinghumancerebrospinalfluidproteomecoverage
AT karelholada affinitydepletionversusrelativeproteinenrichmentasidebysidecomparisonoftwomajorstrategiesforincreasinghumancerebrospinalfluidproteomecoverage
AT jiripetrak affinitydepletionversusrelativeproteinenrichmentasidebysidecomparisonoftwomajorstrategiesforincreasinghumancerebrospinalfluidproteomecoverage
_version_ 1725097450308370432