AI Article Synopsis

  • The introduction of the hyperthermoacidic protease "Krakatoa" allows for rapid digestion of biological samples in a single step, significantly speeding up the proteomics process.*
  • With a quick sample preparation and advanced liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, actionable data can be obtained in less than one hour, enabling more timely quantitative analysis of proteins and peptides.*
  • The method successfully quantified over 160 proteins in minimal blood samples, including specific bioactive peptides like Angiotensin, highlighting its potential for near real-time monitoring of blood biomarkers.*

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Multi-step multi-hour tryptic proteolysis has limited the utility of bottom-up proteomics for cases that require immediate quantitative information. The recently available hyperthermoacidic (HTA) protease "Krakatoa" digests samples in a single 5 to 30-minute step at pH 3 and >80 °C; conditions that disrupt most cells and tissues, denature proteins, and block disulfide reformation. The combination of quick single-step sample preparation with high throughput dual trapping column single analytical column (DTSC) liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) achieves "Rapid Proteomics" in which the time from sample collection to actionable data is less than 1 hour. The presented development and systematic evaluation of this methodology found reproducible quantitation of over 160 proteins from just 1 microliter of whole blood. Furthermore, the preference of the HTA-protease for intact proteins over peptides allows for sensitive targeted quantitation of the Angiotensin I and II bioactive peptides in under half an hour. With these methods we analyzed serum and plasma from 53 individuals and quantified Angiotensin and proteins that were not detected with trypsin. This assessment of Rapid Proteomics suggests that concentration of circulating protein and peptide biomarkers could be measured in almost real-time by LC-MS.

Toc Figure: Rapid proteomics enables near real-time monitoring of circulating blood biomarkers. One microliter of blood is collected every 8 minutes, digested for 20 minutes, and then analyzed by targeted mass spectrometry for 8 minutes. This results in a 30-minute delay with datapoints every 8 minutes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11160709PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.06.01.596979DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rapid proteomics
12
microliter blood
8
blood
4
blood biomarker
4
biomarker quantitation
4
quantitation hour
4
hour rapid
4
proteomics
4
proteomics hyperthermoacidic
4
hyperthermoacidic protease
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!