TY - JOUR
T1 - Reproducibility in protein profiling by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry
AU - Albrethsen, Jakob
PY - 2007/5
Y1 - 2007/5
N2 - BACKGROUND: Protein profiling with high-throughput sample preparation and MALDI-TOF MS analysis is a new potential tool for diagnosis of human diseases. However, analytical reproducibility is a significant challenge in MALDI protein profiling. This minireview summarizes studies of reproducibility of MALDI protein profiling and current approaches to improve its analytical performance.METHODS: The PubMed database was searched using combinations of the following search terms: MALDI, SELDI, reproducibility, variation, precision, peak intensity, quantification, peptide, biomarkers, and proteomics. Acceptance criteria were detailed reports on the reproducibility with MALDI protein profiling and studies describing efforts to improve the analytical performance with this technology.RESULTS: The reported intraexperiment CVs of the peak intensity vary highly between individual protein peaks, with the reported mean CV of the peak intensity varying among studies from 4% to 26%. There is additional interexperiment variation in peak intensity. Current approaches to improve the analytical performance of MALDI protein profiling include automated sample processing, extensive prefractionation strategies, immunocapture, prestructured target surfaces, standardized matrix (co)crystallization, improved MALDI-TOF MS instrument components, internal standard peptides, quality-control samples, replicate measurements, and algorithms for normalization and peak detection.CONCLUSIONS: Further evaluation and optimization of MALDI-TOF MS is recommended before use in routine analysis.
AB - BACKGROUND: Protein profiling with high-throughput sample preparation and MALDI-TOF MS analysis is a new potential tool for diagnosis of human diseases. However, analytical reproducibility is a significant challenge in MALDI protein profiling. This minireview summarizes studies of reproducibility of MALDI protein profiling and current approaches to improve its analytical performance.METHODS: The PubMed database was searched using combinations of the following search terms: MALDI, SELDI, reproducibility, variation, precision, peak intensity, quantification, peptide, biomarkers, and proteomics. Acceptance criteria were detailed reports on the reproducibility with MALDI protein profiling and studies describing efforts to improve the analytical performance with this technology.RESULTS: The reported intraexperiment CVs of the peak intensity vary highly between individual protein peaks, with the reported mean CV of the peak intensity varying among studies from 4% to 26%. There is additional interexperiment variation in peak intensity. Current approaches to improve the analytical performance of MALDI protein profiling include automated sample processing, extensive prefractionation strategies, immunocapture, prestructured target surfaces, standardized matrix (co)crystallization, improved MALDI-TOF MS instrument components, internal standard peptides, quality-control samples, replicate measurements, and algorithms for normalization and peak detection.CONCLUSIONS: Further evaluation and optimization of MALDI-TOF MS is recommended before use in routine analysis.
KW - Biomarkers
KW - Clinical Laboratory Techniques
KW - Humans
KW - Peptides
KW - Proteins
KW - Proteomics
KW - Reproducibility of Results
KW - Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
KW - Journal Article
KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
KW - Review
U2 - 10.1373/clinchem.2006.082644
DO - 10.1373/clinchem.2006.082644
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 17395711
SN - 0009-9147
VL - 53
SP - 852
EP - 858
JO - Clinical Chemistry
JF - Clinical Chemistry
IS - 5
ER -