Features of Peptide
Fragmentation Spectra in Single-Cell
Proteomics
Posted on 2021-12-18 - 00:43
The goal of proteomics
is to identify and quantify the complete
set of proteins in a biological sample. Single-cell proteomics specializes
in the identification and quantitation of proteins for individual
cells, often used to elucidate cellular heterogeneity. The significant
reduction in ions introduced into the mass spectrometer for single-cell
samples could impact the features of MS2 fragmentation spectra. As
all peptide identification software tools have been developed on spectra
from bulk samples and the associated ion-rich spectra, the potential
for spectral features to change is of great interest. We characterize
the differences between single-cell spectra and bulk spectra by examining
three fundamental spectral features that are likely to affect peptide
identification performance. All features show significant changes
in single-cell spectra, including the loss of annotated fragment ions,
blurring signal and background peaks due to diminishing ion intensity,
and distinct fragmentation pattern, compared to bulk spectra. As each
of these features is a foundational part of peptide identification
algorithms, it is critical to adjust algorithms to compensate for
these losses.
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Boekweg, Hannah; Van Der Watt, Daisha; Truong, Thy; Johnston, S. Madisyn; Guise, Amanda J.; Plowey, Edward D.; et al. (1753). Features of Peptide
Fragmentation Spectra in Single-Cell
Proteomics. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00670Â