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[Preprint]. 2024 Jul 21:2024.07.20.604425. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2024.07.20.604425

Deep Profiling of Plasma Proteoforms with Engineered Nanoparticles for Top-down Proteomics

Che-Fan Huang, Michael A Hollas, Aniel Sanchez, Mrittika Bhattacharya, Giang Ho, Ambika Sundaresan, Michael A Caldwell, Xiaoyan Zhao, Ryan Benz, Asim Siddiqui, Neil L Kelleher
PMCID: PMC11275834  PMID: 39071411

ABSTRACT

The dynamic range challenge for detection of proteins and their proteoforms in human plasma has been well documented. Here, we use the nanoparticle protein corona approach to enrich low-abundant proteins selectively and reproducibly from human plasma and use top-down proteomics to quantify differential enrichment for the 2841 detected proteoforms from 114 proteins. Furthermore, nanoparticle enrichment allowed top-down detection of proteoforms between ∼1 µg/mL and ∼10 pg/mL in absolute abundance, providing up to 10 5 -fold increase in proteome depth over neat plasma in which only proteoforms from abundant proteins (>1 µg/mL) were detected. The ability to monitor medium and some low abundant proteoforms through reproducible enrichment significantly extends the applicability of proteoform research by adding depth beyond albumin, immunoglobins and apolipoproteins to uncover many involved in immunity and cell signaling. As proteoforms carry unique information content relative to peptides, this report opens the door to deeper proteoform sequencing in clinical proteomics of disease or aging cohorts.

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