TY - JOUR
T1 - Plasma Proteome Profiling to detect and avoid sample-related biases in biomarker studies
AU - Geyer, Philipp E.
AU - Voytik, Eugenia
AU - Treit, Peter V.
AU - Doll, Sophia
AU - Kleinhempel, Alisa
AU - Niu, Lili
AU - Müller, Johannes B
AU - Buchholtz, Marie-Luise
AU - Bader, Jakob M
AU - Teupser, Daniel
AU - Holdt, Lesca M
AU - Mann, Matthias
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Plasma and serum are rich sources of information regarding an individual's health state, and protein tests inform medical decision making. Despite major investments, few new biomarkers have reached the clinic. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics now allows highly specific and quantitative readout of the plasma proteome. Here, we employ Plasma Proteome Profiling to define quality marker panels to assess plasma samples and the likelihood that suggested biomarkers are instead artifacts related to sample handling and processing. We acquire deep reference proteomes of erythrocytes, platelets, plasma, and whole blood of 20 individuals (> 6,000 proteins), and compare serum and plasma proteomes. Based on spike-in experiments, we determine sample quality-associated proteins, many of which have been reported as biomarker candidates as revealed by a comprehensive literature survey. We provide sample preparation guidelines and an online resource ( www.plasmaproteomeprofiling.org) to assess overall sample-related bias in clinical studies and to prevent costly miss-assignment of biomarker candidates.
AB - Plasma and serum are rich sources of information regarding an individual's health state, and protein tests inform medical decision making. Despite major investments, few new biomarkers have reached the clinic. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics now allows highly specific and quantitative readout of the plasma proteome. Here, we employ Plasma Proteome Profiling to define quality marker panels to assess plasma samples and the likelihood that suggested biomarkers are instead artifacts related to sample handling and processing. We acquire deep reference proteomes of erythrocytes, platelets, plasma, and whole blood of 20 individuals (> 6,000 proteins), and compare serum and plasma proteomes. Based on spike-in experiments, we determine sample quality-associated proteins, many of which have been reported as biomarker candidates as revealed by a comprehensive literature survey. We provide sample preparation guidelines and an online resource ( www.plasmaproteomeprofiling.org) to assess overall sample-related bias in clinical studies and to prevent costly miss-assignment of biomarker candidates.
U2 - 10.15252/emmm.201910427
DO - 10.15252/emmm.201910427
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 31566909
VL - 11
JO - EMBO Molecular Medicine
JF - EMBO Molecular Medicine
SN - 1757-4676
IS - 11
M1 - e10427
ER -