[HTML][HTML] Technical advances in proteomics: new developments in data-independent acquisition

A Hu, WS Noble, A Wolf-Yadlin - F1000Research, 2016 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
F1000Research, 2016ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The ultimate aim of proteomics is to fully identify and quantify the entire complement of
proteins and post-translational modifications in biological samples of interest. For the last 15
years, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) in data-dependent
acquisition (DDA) mode has been the standard for proteomics when sampling breadth and
discovery were the main objectives; multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) LC-MS/MS has
been the standard for targeted proteomics when precise quantification, reproducibility, and …
Abstract
The ultimate aim of proteomics is to fully identify and quantify the entire complement of proteins and post-translational modifications in biological samples of interest. For the last 15 years, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) in data-dependent acquisition (DDA) mode has been the standard for proteomics when sampling breadth and discovery were the main objectives; multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) LC-MS/MS has been the standard for targeted proteomics when precise quantification, reproducibility, and validation were the main objectives. Recently, improvements in mass spectrometer design and bioinformatics algorithms have resulted in the rediscovery and development of another sampling method: data-independent acquisition (DIA). DIA comprehensively and repeatedly samples every peptide in a protein digest, producing a complex set of mass spectra that is difficult to interpret without external spectral libraries. Currently, DIA approaches the identification breadth of DDA while achieving the reproducible quantification characteristic of MRM or its newest version, parallel reaction monitoring (PRM). In comparative de novo identification and quantification studies in human cell lysates, DIA identified up to 89% of the proteins detected in a comparable DDA experiment while providing reproducible quantification of over 85% of them. DIA analysis aided by spectral libraries derived from prior DIA experiments or auxiliary DDA data produces identification and quantification as reproducible and precise as that achieved by MRM/PRM, except on low‑abundance peptides that are obscured by stronger signals. DIA is still a work in progress toward the goal of sensitive, reproducible, and precise quantification without external spectral libraries. New software tools applied to DIA analysis have to deal with deconvolution of complex spectra as well as proper filtering of false positives and false negatives. However, the future outlook is positive, and various researchers are working on novel bioinformatics techniques to address these issues and increase the reproducibility, fidelity, and identification breadth of DIA.
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