Proteomics. Areas of Application for Proteomics Most Commonly Used Proteomics Techniques: Limitations: Examples

Similar documents
Proteomics. Areas of Application for Proteomics. Most Commonly Used Proteomics Techniques: Limitations: Examples

Advances in analytical biochemistry and systems biology: Proteomics

DISCOVERY AND VALIDATION OF TARGETS AND BIOMARKERS BY MASS SPECTROMETRY-BASED PROTEOMICS. September, 2011

2D gel Western blotting using antibodies against ubiquitin, SUMO and acetyl PTM

Kinetics Review. Tonight at 7 PM Phys 204 We will do two problems on the board (additional ones than in the problem sets)

Electrophoresis and transfer

Proteomics And Cancer Biomarker Discovery. Dr. Zahid Khan Institute of chemical Sciences (ICS) University of Peshawar. Overview. Cancer.

Microarray Industry Products

MBios 478: Mass Spectrometry Applications [Dr. Wyrick] Slide #1. Lecture 25: Mass Spectrometry Applications

Towards unbiased biomarker discovery

Recent technology allow production of microarrays composed of 70-mers (essentially a hybrid of the two techniques)

Lecture 8: Affinity Chromatography-III

Gene Expression Technology

Contents... vii. List of Figures... xii. List of Tables... xiv. Abbreviatons... xv. Summary... xvii. 1. Introduction In vitro evolution...

Viral RNAi suppressor reversibly binds sirna to. outcompete Dicer and RISC via multiple-turnover

MagSi Beads. Magnetic Silica Beads for Life Science and Biotechnology study

Lecture #1. Introduction to microarray technology

BCH 462. Western Blot

WesternMAX Alkaline Phosphatase Chemiluminescent Detection Kits

Lecture 23: Clinical and Biomedical Applications of Proteomics; Proteomics Industry

Laboratory Water Quality Affects Protein Separation by 2D Gel Electrophoresis

3.1.4 DNA Microarray Technology

Peptide libraries: applications, design options and considerations. Laura Geuss, PhD May 5, 2015, 2:00-3:00 pm EST

SANTA CRUZ BIOTECHNOLOGY, INC.

Molecular characterization, detection & quantitation of biological products Purin Charoensuksai, PhD

ENCODE DCC Antibody Validation Document

Blot: a spot or stain, especially of ink on paper.

Protein Microarrays?

Orexin A (HUMAN, MOUSE, RAT, PORCINE, OVINE,

What is a microarray

The World Leader in SPR Technology. Jimmy Page, PhD, Biacore, Inc.

ProteoMiner Protein Enrichment Technology

DNA Microarray Technology

DNA Arrays Affymetrix GeneChip System

Molecular Cell Biology - Problem Drill 11: Recombinant DNA

KPL LumiGLO Reserve Chemiluminescent Substrate

Fatchiyah

Goals of pharmacogenomics

Tech Note. Using the ncounter Analysis System with FFPE Samples for Gene Expression Analysis. ncounter Gene Expression. Molecules That Count

special offers from your protein biology resource

TECHNICAL NOTE Phosphorylation Site Specific Aptamers for Cancer Biomarker Peptide Enrichment and Detection in Mass Spectrometry Based Proteomics

Lecture Four. Molecular Approaches I: Nucleic Acids

EECS730: Introduction to Bioinformatics

2054, Chap. 14, page 1

Genome Biology and Biotechnology

Optimization of 2D Gel Transblotting for Host Cell Protein Analysis

Proteomics. Proteomics is the study of all proteins within organism. Challenges

ENCODE DCC Antibody Validation Document

Amersham * ECL * Gel horizontal electrophoresis system

Learning Objectives :

KPL SignaLOCK ChemiWestern Kits (Film and Imager Analysis)

Exam MOL3007 Functional Genomics

Quiz Submissions Quiz 4

AP Biology Gene Expression/Biotechnology REVIEW

Optiblot. Western Blot Reagents and Troubleshooting Tips. Discover more at abcam.com/optiblot

Electrophoresis and the Agilent Bioanalyzer. Advanced Biotechnology Lab I Florida Atlantic University January 23, 2008

American Society of Cytopathology Core Curriculum in Molecular Biology

Methods of Biomaterials Testing Lesson 3-5. Biochemical Methods - Molecular Biology -

SIMS2003. Instructors:Rus Yukhananov, Alex Loguinov BWH, Harvard Medical School. Introduction to Microarray Technology.

Intracellular receptors specify complex patterns of gene expression that are cell and gene

Azure Biosystems Western Blotting Workflow

Chapter 10 Analytical Biotechnology and the Human Genome

Chapter 17: Immunization & Immune Testing. 1. Immunization 2. Diagnostic Immunology

Purification of alpha-1 antitrypsin using an antibody based affinity chromatography medium

Year III Pharm.D Dr. V. Chitra

Module I: Introduction

Purification of Lactate Dehydrogenase

Optiblot ECL Ultra Detect Kit (1.2pg 2ng)

Supplementary Figure 1. Utilization of publicly available antibodies in different applications.

NPTEL VIDEO COURSE PROTEOMICS PROF. SANJEEVA SRIVASTAVA

Make Your Immunology Research Easy. Kun YIN Associate Director of Marketing Division, GenScript

Exam 2 BIO200, Winter 2012

TECHNIQUES USED IN GENETIC ENGINEERING 1

Investigation of a Mammalian Cellular Model for Differential Protein Expression Analysis Using 1D PAGE and Cleavable ICAT Reagents

Discovery and Humanization of Novel High Affinity Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies to Human IL-17A

including, but not limited to:

Application of Biacore Technology

Microarray. Slide Selection Chart... J2. Epoxide-coated Slides... J3. GAPS II-coated Slides... J5. Corning Cover Glass... J6

Western Blotting Detection Reagents

Introduction to BioMEMS & Medical Microdevices DNA Microarrays and Lab-on-a-Chip Methods

Please purchase PDFcamp Printer on to remove this watermark. DNA microarray

ELISPOT and FLUOROSPOT kits

SPHERO TM Coated Particles

Rat IGF-1 ELISA Kit (rigf-1-elisa)

Top down proteomics approaches: (a) to monitor protein purification; (b) to resolve PTM isoforms and protein complexes

How to run Alpha assay: How to setup an Alpha assay Make your own assay!

Protein Purification Products. Complete Solutions for All of Your Protein Purification Applications

6. GENE EXPRESSION ANALYSIS MICROARRAYS

Dolphin-Chemi Plus. Aim: To visualise and evaluate the performance of chemiluminescent immunoblots using Wealtec s Dolphin-Chemi plus image system

WakoPureChemical. No WakoPURE system Quick-CBB PLUS Silver Stain MS Kit Negative Gel Stain MS Kit Matrix for MALDI-TOFMS BAMBANKER

SUMOstar Gene Fusion Technology

Biology 201 (Genetics) Exam #3 120 points 20 November Read the question carefully before answering. Think before you write.

2/5/16. Honeypot Ants. DNA sequencing, Transcriptomics and Genomics. Gene sequence changes? And/or gene expression changes?

Antibody Services from GenScript

Mouse Factor XII Total ELISA Kit

SNP GENOTYPING WITH iplex REAGENTS AND THE MASSARRAY SYSTEM

Strep-tag detection in Western blots

Strategies for Assessment of Immunotoxicology in Preclinical Drug Development

Expression Array System

Practical Applications of Immunology (Chapter 18) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda Czura, Ph.D. Suffolk County Community College Eastern Campus

Transcription:

Proteomics Areas of Application for Proteomics Most Commonly Used Proteomics Techniques: Antibody arrays Protein activity arrays 2-D gels ICAT technology SELDI Limitations: protein sources surfaces and formats protein immobilization fabrication Examples

Diagnostics: Areas of Application for Proteomics detection of antigens and antibodies in blood samples profiling of sera to discover new disease markers environment and food monitoring Protein expression profiling: organ and disease specific arrays Library screening: isolation of individual members from display libraries for further expression or manipulation selection of antibodies and protein scaffolds from phage or ribosome display libraries for use in capture arrays Protein functional analysis: ligand-binding properties of receptors enzyme activities protein-protein interactions antibody cross reactivity and specificity, epitope mapping Antibody Arrays Screening protein-protein interactions Studying protein posttranslational modifications Examining protein expression patterns Antibody Arrays The layout design of the BD Clontech Ab Microarray 380. The BD Clontech Ab Microarray 380 (#K1847-1) contains 378 monoclonal antibodies arrayed in a 32 x 24 grid. Each antibody is printed in duplicate. Dark gray dots at the corners represent Cy3/Cy5-labeled bovine serum albumin (BSA) spots, which serve as orientation markers. The open circles correspond to unlabeled BSA spots, which serve as negative controls. For complete descriptions of the proteins profiled by the Ab Microarray 380, visit bdbiosciences.com

Protein Activity Arrays Panomics Transcription Factor Arrays: A set of biotin-labeled DNA binding oligonucleotides (TranSignal probe mix) is preincubated with any nuclear extract of interest to allow the formation of protein/dna (or TF/DNA) complexes; The protein/dna complexes are separated from the free probes; The probes in the complexes are then extracted and hybridized to the TranSignal Array. Signals can be detected using either x-ray film or chemiluminescent imaging. All reagents for HRPbased chemiluminescent detection are included. Source: Panomics, Inc. Protein Activity Arrays Gel Shift Assay Protein Array Source: Panomics, Inc. Limitations, Challenges and Bottlenecks Protein production: cell-based expression systems for recombinant proteins purification from natural sources production in vitro by cell-free translation systems synthetic methods for peptides Immobilization surfaces and array formats: Common physical supports include glass slides, silicon, microwells, nitrocellulose or PVDF membranes, microbeads Protein immobilization should be: reproducible applicable to proteins of different properties (size, charge, ) amenable to high throughput and automation, and compatible with retention of fully functional protein activity such that maintains correct protein orientation Array fabrication: robotic contact printing ink-jetting piezoelectric spotting photolithography

2D Gel Electrophoresis + Mass Spectrometry 2D Gel Electrophoresis Protein Resolution Bandara & Kennedy (2002) 2D Gel Electrophoresis Protein Resolution Courtesy of Bio-Rad Courtesy of Bio-Rad Courtesy of Fermentas

2D Gel Electrophoresis Image Analysis Courtesy of Decodon Courtesy of Alphainnotech Bandara & Kennedy (2002) 2D Gel Electrophoresis Mass Spectrometry Source: UNC Proteomics Core Facility

Image courtesy of University of Arizona Proteomics Core SEQUEST is a program that uses raw peptide MS/MS data (off TSQ-7000 or LCQ) to identify unknown proteins. It works by searching protein and nucleotide databases (in FASTA format) on the web for peptides that match the molecular weight of the unknown peptides produced by digestion of your protein(s) of interest. Theoretical MS/MS spectra are then generated and a score is given to each one. The top 500 scored theoretical peptides are retained and a cross correlation analysis is then performed between the un-interpreted MS/MS spectra (real MS/MS spectra) of unknown peptides with each of the retained theoretical MS/MS spectra. Highly correlated spectra result in identification of the peptide sequences and multiple peptide identification and thus determine the protein and organism of origin corresponding to the unknown protein sample. Isotope Coded Affinity Tag (ICAT) Analysis Bandara & Kennedy (2002)

Perticoin et al., Toxicologic Pathology, 32(Suppl. 1):122 130, 2004 SELDI Analysis Representative raw spectra and gel-view (grey-scale) of serum from a normal donor, and from patients with either BPH (benign prostate hyperplasia) or prostate cancer (PCA) using the IMAC3-Cu chip chemistry From: www.evms.edu/vpc/seldi/seldiprocess/ Courtesy CIPHERGEN The upregulated 11.9 kda biomarker from the TMPD-treated rats was searched via Tagldent (SWISS-PROT), yielding a tentative identity as parvalbumin-alpha. This candidate was subsequently purified, peptide mapped and searched to confirm the identity. Parvalbumin is involved in muscle homeostasis.

Limitations, Challenges and Bottlenecks Resolution: number of proteins that can be separated/distinguished (500,000?!?) pi resolution mass resolution (gels and mass spectrometry) Amount of the protein in the sample: too little to be seen on a 2D gel? too little to be extracted and digested? Protein solubility Database searching and peptide identification Bandara & Kennedy (2002) Schneider LV, Hall MP. Drug Discov Today. 2005 10:353-63.

Two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis of rat liver total proteins. The proteins were separated on a ph 3 10 nonlinear IPG strip (left), or ph 4-7 IPG strip (right), followed by a 10% SDS polyacrylamide gel. The gel was stained with Coomassie blue. The spots were analyzed by MALDI-MS. The proteins identified are designated with the accession numbers of the corresponding database. From Fountoulakis & Suter (2002) Two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis of rat liver cytosolic proteins. The proteins were separated on a ph 3 10 nonlinear IPG strip (left), or ph 5 6 IPG strip (right), followed by a 10% SDS polyacrylamide gel. The spots were analyzed by MALDI-MS. The proteins identified are designated with the accession numbers of the corresponding database. From Fountoulakis & Suter (2002) Summary of the 2-D gel electrophoresis data In total, 273 different gene products were identified from all gels: 65 gene products were only detected in the gels carrying total 52 in the gels carrying cytosolic remaining proteins were found in both samples 45 proteins out of the 62 found in the gels carrying total protein samples were detected in the broad ph range 3 10 gel, 11 in the narrow ph range and nine in both types of gels 52 proteins only detected in the gels carrying the cytosolic fraction, except for 6 which were found in the broad ph range 3 10 gel, were found in one of the narrow ph range gels only (narrow ph range strips helped to detect 46 proteins not found in the broad range gels) Protein distribution was based on the protein identification by mass spectrometry and may not be complete due to: spot loss during automatic excision peptide loss mainly from weak spots spot overlapping small protein size About 5000 spots were excised from 13 2-D gels, 5 carrying total and 8 carrying cytosolic proteins. The analysis resulted in the identification of about 3000 proteins, which were the products of 273 different genes From Fountoulakis & Suter (2002)

Summary of the 2-D gel electrophoresis data From Fountoulakis & Suter (2002) Animals: Male Wistar rats (10 12 weeks, bw: 225±8 g) Treatment: Bromobenzene (i.p., 5.0 mmol/kg bw) dissolved in corn oil (40% v/v) Duration of treatment: 24 hrs The bromobenzene dose was hepatotoxic, and this was confirmed by the finding of a nearly complete glutathione depletion at 24 hr after bromobenzene administration. The low level of oxidised (GSSG) relative to reduced glutathione (GSH) indicates that the depletion is primarily due to conjugation and to a much lesser extent due to oxidation of glutathione. The bromobenzene administration resulted in on average 7% decrease in body weight after 24 hr. From: Heijne et al. (2003)

Gene Expression Profiling Liver samples, total RNA (50 µg/array experiment) cdna microarrays (3000 genes) Reference sample: pooled RNA from liver (~50% w/w), kidneys, lungs, brain, thymus, testes, spleen, heart, and muscle of untreated Wistar rats Duplicated microarray/sample 2-Fold cutoff (p<0.01) relative to the vehicle control: 32 genes were found to be significantly upregulated and 17 were repressed following bromobenzene treatment 1.5-Fold cutoff (p<0.01) relative to the vehicle control: 63 genes were found to be significantly upregulated and 35 genes were repressed following bromobenzene treatment Functional groups: Drug metabolism Glutathione metabolism Oxidative stress Acute phase response Protein synthesis Protein degradation Others From: Heijne et al. (2003) Glutathione metabolism: Oxidative stress: From: Heijne et al. (2003) Acute phase response: From: Heijne et al. (2003) 11

Protein Expression Profiling 3 two-dimensional gels were prepared from each sample A reference protein pattern contained 1124 protein spots 24 proteins were differentially expressed (BB or Corn oil) From: Heijne et al. (2003)