June 11, 2010
Journal Article

Establishing the Proteome of Normal Human Cerebrospinal Fluid

Abstract

Abstract Background Knowledge of the entire protein content, the proteome, of normal human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) would enable insights into neurologic and psychiatric disorders. Until now technologic hurdles and access to true normal samples hindered attaining this goal. Methods and Principal Findings We applied immunoaffinity separation and high sensitivity and resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry to examine CSF from healthy normal individuals. 2630 proteins in CSF from normal subjects were identified, of which 56% were CSF-specific, not found in the much larger set of 3654 proteins we have identified in plasma. We also examined CSF from groups of subjects who were previously used by other studies as surrogates for normals. They had neurologic symptoms that warranted a lumbar puncture but whose values from the clinical laboratory were reported as normal. We found statistically significant differences between their CSF proteins and our non-neurological normals. We also examined CSF from 10 volunteer subjects who had lumbar punctures at least 4 weeks apart and found that there was little variability in CSF proteins in an individual as compared to subject to subject. Conclusions Our results represent the most comprehensive characterization of true normal CSF to date. This normal CSF proteome establishes a comparative standard and basis for investigations into a variety of diseases with neurological and psychiatric features.

Revised: December 21, 2011 | Published: June 11, 2010

Citation

Schutzer S.E., T. Liu, B. Natelson, T.E. Angel, A.A. Schepmoes, S.O. Purvine, and K.K. Hixson, et al. 2010. Establishing the Proteome of Normal Human Cerebrospinal Fluid. PLoS One 5, no. 6:e10980-. PNWD-SA-8931. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0010980