June 1, 2008
Journal Article

The Influence of Sample Preparation and Replicate Analyses on HeLa Cell Phosphoproteome Coverage

Abstract

Ongoing optimization of proteomic methodologies seeks to improve both coverage and confidence in protein identifications. The optimization of sample preparation, inclusion of technical replicates (repeated instrumental analysis of the same sample) and biological replicates (multiple individual samples) is crucial in proteomic studies to avoid the pitfalls associated with single point analysis and under-sampling. Phosphopeptides were isolated from HeLa cells and analyzed by nano-reversed phase liquid chromatography electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (nano-RP-LC-MS/MS). We observed that a detergent-based protein extraction approach, followed with additional steps for nucleic acid removal, provided a simple alternative to the broadly used Trizol extraction. The evaluation of four technical replicates demonstrated measurement reproducibility with low percent variance in peptide responses at approximately 3%, where additional peptide identifications were made with each added technical replicate. The inclusion of six technical replicates for moderately complex protein extracts (approximately 4000 uniquely identified peptides per dataset) affords the optimal collection of peptide information.

Revised: October 12, 2015 | Published: June 1, 2008

Citation

Ham B.M., F. Yang, H. Jayachandran, N. Jaitly, M.E. Monroe, M.A. Gritsenko, and E.A. Livesay, et al. 2008. The Influence of Sample Preparation and Replicate Analyses on HeLa Cell Phosphoproteome Coverage. Journal of Proteome Research 7, no. 6:2215-2221. PNWD-SA-7904.