posted on 2002-10-15, 00:00authored byJunmin Peng, Joshua E. Elias, Carson C. Thoreen, Larry J. Licklider, Steven P. Gygi
Highly complex protein mixtures can be directly analyzed after proteolysis by liquid chromatography
coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC−MS/MS). In this paper, we have utilized the combination
of strong cation exchange (SCX) and reversed-phase (RP) chromatography to achieve two-dimensional
separation prior to MS/MS. One milligram of whole yeast protein was proteolyzed and separated by
SCX chromatography (2.1 mm i.d.) with fraction collection every minute during an 80-min elution.
Eighty fractions were reduced in volume and then re-injected via an autosampler in an automated
fashion using a vented-column (100 μm i.d.) approach for RP-LC−MS/MS analysis. More than 162 000
MS/MS spectra were collected with 26 815 matched to yeast peptides (7537 unique peptides). A total
of 1504 yeast proteins were unambiguously identified in this single analysis. We present a comparison
of this experiment with a previously published yeast proteome analysis by Yates and colleagues
(Washburn, M. P.; Wolters, D.; Yates, J. R., III. Nat. Biotechnol.2001, 19, 242−7). In addition, we report
an in-depth analysis of the false-positive rates associated with peptide identification using the Sequest
algorithm and a reversed yeast protein database. New criteria are proposed to decrease false-positives
to less than 1% and to greatly reduce the need for manual interpretation while permitting more proteins
to be identified.
Keywords: proteome • tandem mass spectrometry • LC−MS/MS • vented column • Sequest criteria