Practical immunoaffinity-enrichment LC-MS for measuring protein kinetics of low-abundance proteins

ME Lassman, T McAvoy, AYH Lee, D Chappell… - Clinical …, 2014 - academic.oup.com
ME Lassman, T McAvoy, AYH Lee, D Chappell, O Wong, H Zhou, G Reyes-Soffer…
Clinical chemistry, 2014academic.oup.com
BACKGROUND For a more complete understanding of pharmacodynamic, metabolic, and
pathophysiologic effects, protein kinetics, such as production rate and fractional catabolic
rate, can offer substantially more information than protein concentration alone. Kinetic
experiments with stable isotope tracers typically require laborious sample preparation and
are most often used for studying abundant proteins. Here we describe a practical
methodology for measuring isotope enrichment into low-abundance proteins that uses an …
BACKGROUND
For a more complete understanding of pharmacodynamic, metabolic, and pathophysiologic effects, protein kinetics, such as production rate and fractional catabolic rate, can offer substantially more information than protein concentration alone. Kinetic experiments with stable isotope tracers typically require laborious sample preparation and are most often used for studying abundant proteins. Here we describe a practical methodology for measuring isotope enrichment into low-abundance proteins that uses an automated procedure and immunoaffinity enrichment (IA) with LC-MS. Low-abundance plasma proteins cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) and proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) were studied as examples.
METHODS
Human participants (n = 39) were infused with [2H3]leucine, and blood samples were collected at multiple time points. Sample preparation and analysis were automated and multiplexed to increase throughput. Proteins were concentrated from plasma by use of IA and digested with trypsin to yield proteotypic peptides that were analyzed by microflow chromatography-mass spectrometry to measure isotope enrichment.
RESULTS
The IA procedure was optimized to provide the greatest signal intensity. Use of a gel-free method increased throughput while increasing the signal. The intra- and interassay CVs were <15% at all isotope enrichment levels studied. More than 1400 samples were analyzed in <3 weeks without the need for instrument stoppages or user interventions.
CONCLUSIONS
The use of automated gel-free methods to multiplex the measurement of isotope enrichment was applied to the low-abundance proteins CETP and PCSK9.
Oxford University Press