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Download fileAssessment of Label-Free Quantification in Discovery Proteomics and Impact of Technological Factors and Natural Variability of Protein Abundance
dataset
posted on 2017-02-20, 00:00 authored by MHD Rami Al Shweiki, Susann Mönchgesang, Petra Majovsky, Domenika Thieme, Diana Trutschel, Wolfgang HoehenwarterWe
evaluated the state of label-free discovery proteomics focusing
especially on technological contributions and contributions of naturally
occurring differences in protein abundance to the intersample variability
in protein abundance estimates in this highly peptide-centric technology.
First, the performance of popular quantitative proteomics software,
Proteome Discoverer, Scaffold, MaxQuant, and Progenesis QIP, was benchmarked
using their default parameters and some modified settings. Beyond
this, the intersample variability in protein abundance estimates was
decomposed into variability introduced by the entire technology itself
and variable protein amounts inherent to individual plants of the Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 accession. The technical component
was considerably higher than the biological intersample variability,
suggesting an effect on the degree and validity of reported biological
changes in protein abundance. Surprisingly, the biological variability,
protein abundance estimates, and protein fold changes were recorded
differently by the software used to quantify the proteins, warranting
caution in the comparison of discovery proteomics results. As expected,
∼99% of the proteome was invariant in the isogenic plants in
the absence of environmental factors; however, few proteins showed
substantial quantitative variability. This naturally occurring variation
between individual organisms can have an impact on the causality of
reported protein fold changes.