Communication between infected cells and cells in the surrounding tissue is a determinant of viral spread. However, it remains unclear how cells in close or distant proximity to an infected cell respond to primary or secondary infections. We establish a cell-based system to characterize a virus microenvironment, distinguishing infected, neighboring, and distal cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, we developed an ultra-sensitive CE-MS/MS method for bottom-up proteomics analysis of limited samples, down to sub-nanogram levels of total protein. Analysis of 880 and 88 pg of the HeLa protein digest standard by CE-MS/MS yielded ∼1100 ± 46 and ∼160 ± 59 proteins, respectively, demonstrating higher protein and peptide identifications than the current state-of-the-art CE-MS/MS-based proteomic analyses with similar amounts of sample. To demonstrate potential applications of our ultra-sensitive CE-MS/MS method for the analysis of limited biological samples, we digested 500 and 1000 HeLa cells using a miniaturized in-solution digestion workflow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn-depth LC-MS-based proteomic profiling of limited biological and clinical samples, such as rare cells or tissue sections from laser capture microdissection or microneedle biopsies, has been problematic due, in large, to the inefficiency of sample preparation and attendant sample losses. To address this issue, we developed on-microsolid-phase extraction tip (OmSET)-based sample preparation for limited biological samples. OmSET is simple, efficient, reproducible, and scalable and is a widely accessible method for processing ∼200 to 10,000 cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, we pioneered a combination of ultralow flow (ULF) high-efficiency ultranarrow bore monolithic LC columns coupled to MS via a high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) interface to evaluate the potential applicability for high sensitivity, robust, and reproducible proteomic profiling of low nanogram-level complex biological samples. As a result, ULF LC-FAIMS-MS brought unprecedented sensitivity levels and high reproducibility in bottom-up proteomic profiling. In addition, FAIMS improved the dynamic range, signal-to-noise ratios, and detection limits in ULF LC-MS-based measurements by significantly reducing chemical noise in comparison to the conventional nanoESI interface used with the same ULF LC-MS setup.
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