Quantification of Peptide m/z Distributions from 13C-Labeled Cultures with High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry

被引:14
|
作者
Allen, Doug K. [1 ]
Goldford, Joshua [2 ]
Gierse, James K. [1 ]
Mandy, Dominic [2 ]
Diepenbrock, Christine [1 ]
Libourel, Igor G. L. [2 ]
机构
[1] ARS, Plant Genet Res Unit, USDA, Donald Danforth Plant Sci Ctr, St Louis, MO 63132 USA
[2] Univ Minnesota, Dept Plant Biol, St Paul, MN 55108 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
METABOLIC FLUX ANALYSIS; ISOTOPIC ABUNDANCE MEASUREMENTS; AMINO-ACIDS; CELL-CULTURE; PROTEOMICS; ACCURACY; C-13; PROTEINS; SYSTEMS; DESIGN;
D O I
10.1021/ac403985w
中图分类号
O65 [分析化学];
学科分类号
070302 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Isotopic labeling studies of primary metabolism frequently utilize GC/MS to quantify C-13 in protein-hydrolyzed amino acids. During processing some amino acids are degraded, which reduces the size of the measurement set. The advent of high-resolution mass spectrometers provides a tool to assess molecular masses of peptides with great precision and accuracy and computationally infer information about labeling in amino acids. Amino acids that are isotopically labeled during metabolism result in labeled peptides that contain spatial and temporal information that is associated with the biosynthetic origin of the protein. The quantification of isotopic labeling in peptides can therefore provide an assessment of amino acid metabolism that is specific to subcellular, cellular, or temporal conditions. A high-resolution orbital trap was used to quantify isotope labeling in peptides that were obtained from unlabeled and isotopically labeled soybean embryos and Escherichia coli cultures. Standard deviations were determined by estimating the multinomial variance associated with each element of the m/z distribution. Using the estimated variance, quantification of the m/z distribution across multiple scans was achieved by a nonlinear fitting approach. Observed m/z distributions of uniformly labeled E. coli peptides indicated no significant differences between observed and simulated m/z distributions. Alternatively, amino acid m/z distributions obtained from GC/MS were convolved to simulate peptide m/z distributions but resulted in distinct profiles due to the production of protein prior to isotopic labeling. The results indicate that peptide mass isotopologue measurements faithfully represent mass distributions, are suitable for quantification of isotope-labeling-based studies, and provide additional information over existing methods.
引用
收藏
页码:1894 / 1901
页数:8
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [31] A comparative protein profiling of lymphocytes from blood of patients with chronic lymphoid leukemia by high-resolution mass-spectrometry in search of new markers for heterogeneity and disease prognosis
    Yu. E. Glazyrin
    M. A. Komarova
    V. I. Bakhtina
    M. V. Silacheva
    I. V. Demko
    A. S. Zamay
    T. N. Zamay
    Journal of Analytical Chemistry, 2016, 71 : 1242 - 1250
  • [32] High-Resolution Hydrogen-Deuterium Protection Factors from Sparse Mass Spectrometry Data Validated by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Measurements
    Stofella, Michele
    Skinner, Simon P.
    Sobott, Frank
    Houwing-Duistermaat, Jeanine
    Paci, Emanuele
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MASS SPECTROMETRY, 2022, 33 (05) : 813 - 822
  • [33] Structural analysis of 2 D-gel-separated glycoproteins from human cerebrospinal fluid by tandem high-resolution mass spectrometry
    Håkansson, K
    Emmett, MR
    Marshall, AG
    Davidsson, P
    Nilsson, CL
    JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH, 2003, 2 (06) : 581 - 588
  • [34] Discrimination of three commercial tuna species through species-specific peptides: From high-resolution mass spectrometry discovery to MRM validation
    Hu, Lingping
    Zhu, Yin
    Zhong, Chao
    Cai, Qiang
    Zhang, Hongwei
    Zhang, Xiaomei
    Yao, Qian
    Hang, Yuyu
    Ge, Yingliang
    Hu, Yaqin
    FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 187
  • [35] Direct analysis of dried blood spots by in-line desorption combined with high-resolution chromatography and mass spectrometry for quantification of maple syrup urine disease biomarkers leucine and isoleucine
    Miller, John H.
    Poston, Philip A.
    Karnes, H. Thomas
    ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2011, 400 (01) : 237 - 244
  • [36] High-resolution palaeodietary reconstruction: Amino acid δ13C analysis of keratin from single hairs of mummified human individuals
    Mora, Alice
    Arriaza, Bernardo T.
    Standen, Vivien G.
    Valdiosera, Cristina
    Salim, Agus
    Smith, Colin
    QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 436 : 96 - 113
  • [37] Characterization of Trivalently Crosslinked C-Terminal Telopeptide of Type I Collagen (CTX) Species in Human Plasma and Serum Using High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry
    Demeuse, Justine
    Determe, William
    Grifnee, Elodie
    Massonnet, Philippe
    Schoumacher, Matthieu
    Huyghebeart, Loreen
    Dubrowski, Thomas
    Peeters, Stephanie
    Le Goff, Caroline
    Cavalier, Etienne
    PROTEOMICS, 2025, 25 (04)
  • [38] High-throughput and high-resolution two dimensional mapping of pI and m/z using a microchip in a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometer
    Fujita, M
    Hattori, W
    Sano, T
    Baba, M
    Someya, H
    Miyazaki, K
    Kamijo, K
    Takahashi, K
    Kawaura, H
    JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A, 2006, 1111 (02) : 200 - 205
  • [39] Tentative identification of polar and mid-polar compounds in extracts from wine lees by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry in high-resolution mode
    Delgado de la Torre, M. P.
    Priego-Capote, F.
    Luque de Castro, M. D.
    JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY, 2015, 50 (06): : 826 - 837
  • [40] Identification and quantification of immunoglobulin G (G1, G2, G3 and G4) in human blood plasma by high-resolution quadrupole-Orbitrap mass spectrometry
    Huang, Zhu
    Pan, Xiao-Dong
    RSC ADVANCES, 2017, 7 (33): : 20212 - 20218