Proteomic method to extract, concentrate, digest and enrich peptides from fossils with coloured (humic) substances for mass spectrometry analyses

Author:

Schroeter Elena R.1ORCID,Blackburn Kevin2ORCID,Goshe Michael B.2,Schweitzer Mary H.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27513, USA

2. Department of Molecular and Structural Biochemistry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27513, USA

Abstract

Humic substances are breakdown products of decaying organic matter that co-extract with proteins from fossils. These substances are difficult to separate from proteins in solution and interfere with analyses of fossil proteomes. We introduce a method combining multiple recent advances in extraction protocols to both concentrate proteins from fossil specimens with high humic content and remove humics, producing clean samples easily analysed by mass spectrometry (MS). This method includes: (i) a non-demineralizing extraction buffer that eliminates protein loss during the demineralization step in routine methods; (ii) filter-aided sample preparation (FASP) of peptides, which concentrates and digests extracts in one filter, allowing the separation of large humics after digestion; (iii) centrifugal stage tipping, which further clarifies and concentrates samples in a uniform process performed simultaneously on multiple samples. We apply this method to a moa fossil (approx. 800–1000 years) dark with humic content, generating colourless samples and enabling the detection of more proteins with greater sequence coverage than previous MS analyses on this same specimen. This workflow allows analyses of low-abundance proteins in fossils containing humics and thus may widen the range of extinct organisms and regions of their proteomes we can explore with MS.

Funder

Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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