Home
Scholarly Works
Human Serum Proteins Preseparated by...
Journal article

Human Serum Proteins Preseparated by Electrophoresis or Chromatography Followed by Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Abstract

Electrophoretic and chromatographic sample preparations were compared and together detected the presence of some 600 types of protein products in human serum. Proteins from crude serum preseparated by ionic electrophoresis, chromatography, or a combination of both were analyzed. Proteins were digested with trypsin or chymotrypsin. Naturally occurring peptides were also collected by reversed-phase chromatography. The resulting peptides were identified by tandem mass spectrometry. The peptides were either desorbed by a laser from a metal chip into a quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometer or ionized as an electro-spray from reversed-phase chromatography via a metal needle under voltage into an ion-trap mass spectrometer. All of the commonly known proteins associated with serum were detected, and the two mass spectrometers agreed on the identity of abundant serum proteins. Preseparation of serum proteins prior to digestion markedly enhanced the capacity to detect un-common proteins from blood. Electrophoretic- and chromatography-based experiments were found to be complementary. Many novel cellular proteins not previously associated with serum were recorded.

Authors

Marshall J; Jankowski A; Furesz S; Kireeva I; Barker L; Dombrovsky M; Zhu W; Jacks K; Ingratta L; Bruin J

Journal

Journal of Proteome Research, Vol. 3, No. 3, pp. 364–382

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

June 1, 2004

DOI

10.1021/pr034039p

ISSN

1535-3893

Contact the Experts team