Comparison of SPEED, S-Trap, and In-Solution-Based Sample Preparation Methods for Mass Spectrometry in Kidney Tissue and Plasma

Author:

Templeton Evelyn M.1ORCID,Pilbrow Anna P.1ORCID,Kleffmann Torsten2,Pickering John W.1,Rademaker Miriam T.1,Scott Nicola J. A.1ORCID,Ellmers Leigh J.1,Charles Christopher J.1ORCID,Endre Zoltan H.3ORCID,Richards A. Mark14,Cameron Vicky A.1ORCID,Lassé Moritz1

Affiliation:

1. Christchurch Heart Institute, Department of Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch 8014, New Zealand

2. Research Infrastructure Centre, Division of Health Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand

3. Department of Nephrology, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia

4. Cardiovascular Research Institute, Department of Cardiology, National University of Singapore, Singapore 119077, Singapore

Abstract

Mass spectrometry is a powerful technique for investigating renal pathologies and identifying biomarkers, and efficient protein extraction from kidney tissue is essential for bottom-up proteomic analyses. Detergent-based strategies aid cell lysis and protein solubilization but are poorly compatible with downstream protein digestion and liquid chromatography-coupled mass spectrometry, requiring additional purification and buffer-exchange steps. This study compares two well-established detergent-based methods for protein extraction (in-solution sodium deoxycholate (SDC); suspension trapping (S-Trap)) with the recently developed sample preparation by easy extraction and digestion (SPEED) method, which uses strong acid for denaturation. We compared the quantitative performance of each method using label-free mass spectrometry in both sheep kidney cortical tissue and plasma. In kidney tissue, SPEED quantified the most unique proteins (SPEED 1250; S-Trap 1202; SDC 1197). In plasma, S-Trap produced the most unique protein quantifications (S-Trap 150; SDC 148; SPEED 137). Protein quantifications were reproducible across biological replicates in both tissue (R2 = 0.85–0.90) and plasma (SPEED R2 = 0.84; SDC R2 = 0.76, S-Trap R2 = 0.65). Our data suggest SPEED as the optimal method for proteomic preparation in kidney tissue and S-Trap or SPEED as the optimal method for plasma, depending on whether a higher number of protein quantifications or greater reproducibility is desired.

Funder

Heart Foundation of New Zealand

Health Research Council of New Zealand

Lotteries Health Research

Canterbury Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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