TY - JOUR
T1 - Top-down proteomics : enhancing 2D gel electrophoresis from tissue processing to high-sensitivity protein detection
AU - Wright, Elise P.
AU - Partridge, Melissa A.
AU - Padula, Matthew P.
AU - Gauci, Victoria J.
AU - Malladi, Chandra S.
AU - Coorssen, Jens R.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - The large-scale resolution and detection of proteins from complex native mixtures is fundamental to quantitative proteomic analyses. Comprehensive analyses depend on careful tissue handling and quantitative protein extraction and assessment. To most effectively link these analyses with an understanding of underlying molecular mechanisms, it is critical that all protein types - isoforms, splice variants and those with functionally important PTMs - are quantitatively extracted with high reproducibility. Methodological details concerning protein extraction and resolution using 2DE are discussed with reference to current in-gel protein detection limits. We confirm a significant increase in total protein, and establish that extraction, resolution and detection of phospho- and glycoproteins are improved following automated frozen disruption relative to manual homogenisation. The quality of 2DE protein resolution is established using third-dimension separations and 'deep imaging'; substantially more proteins/protein species than previously realised are actually resolved by 2DE. Thus, the key issue for effective proteome analyses is most likely to be detection, not resolution. Thus, these systematic methodological and technical advances further solidify the role of 2DE in top-down proteomics. By routinely assessing as much proteomic data from a sample as possible, 2DE enables more detailed and critical insights into molecular mechanisms underlying different physiological states.
AB - The large-scale resolution and detection of proteins from complex native mixtures is fundamental to quantitative proteomic analyses. Comprehensive analyses depend on careful tissue handling and quantitative protein extraction and assessment. To most effectively link these analyses with an understanding of underlying molecular mechanisms, it is critical that all protein types - isoforms, splice variants and those with functionally important PTMs - are quantitatively extracted with high reproducibility. Methodological details concerning protein extraction and resolution using 2DE are discussed with reference to current in-gel protein detection limits. We confirm a significant increase in total protein, and establish that extraction, resolution and detection of phospho- and glycoproteins are improved following automated frozen disruption relative to manual homogenisation. The quality of 2DE protein resolution is established using third-dimension separations and 'deep imaging'; substantially more proteins/protein species than previously realised are actually resolved by 2DE. Thus, the key issue for effective proteome analyses is most likely to be detection, not resolution. Thus, these systematic methodological and technical advances further solidify the role of 2DE in top-down proteomics. By routinely assessing as much proteomic data from a sample as possible, 2DE enables more detailed and critical insights into molecular mechanisms underlying different physiological states.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/545947
U2 - 10.1002/pmic.201300424
DO - 10.1002/pmic.201300424
M3 - Article
SN - 1615-9853
VL - 14
SP - 872
EP - 889
JO - Proteomics
JF - Proteomics
IS - 45511
ER -