1. Academic Validation
  2. Achieving a 35-Plex Tandem Mass Tag Reagent Set through Deuterium Incorporation

Achieving a 35-Plex Tandem Mass Tag Reagent Set through Deuterium Incorporation

  • J Proteome Res. 2024 Nov 1;23(11):5153-5165. doi: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.4c00668.
Nathan R Zuniga 1 Dustin C Frost 2 Karsten Kuhn 3 Myungsun Shin 1 Rebecca L Whitehouse 1 Ting-Yu Wei 1 Yuchen He 1 Shane L Dawson 1 Ian Pike 3 Ryan D Bomgarden 2 Steven P Gygi 1 Joao A Paulo 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, United States.
  • 2 Thermo Fisher Scientific, Rockford, Illinois 61101, United States.
  • 3 Proteome Sciences, London KT15 2HJ, U.K.
Abstract

Mass spectrometry-based sample multiplexing with isobaric tags permits the development of high-throughput and precise quantitative biological assays with proteome-wide coverage and minimal missing values. Here, we nearly doubled the multiplexing capability of the TMTpro reagent set to a 35-plex through the incorporation of one deuterium isotope into the reporter group. Substituting deuterium frequently results in suboptimal peak coelution, which can compromise the accuracy of reporter ion-based quantification. To counteract the deuterium effect on quantitation, we implemented a strategy that necessitated the segregation of nondeuterium and deuterium-containing channels into distinct subplexes during normalization procedures, with reassembly through a common bridge channel. This multiplexing strategy of "design independent sub-plexes but acquire together" (DISAT) was used to compare protein expression differences between human cell lines and in a cysteine-profiling (i.e., chemoproteomics) experiment to identify compounds binding to cysteine-113 of PIN1.

Keywords

ABPP; Astral; TMTpro; TMTproD; deuterium; isobaric tagging.

Figures
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  • HY-139361
    99.69%, Pin1 Inhibitor