Revolutionizing Data Independent Acquisition on q-OT-IT Tribrid Mass Spectrometers
Posters | 2015 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | ASMSInstrumentation
Data independent acquisition (DIA) offers comprehensive and reproducible proteome profiling by fragmenting all ions in defined m/z windows. Its application to whole cell lysates demands high sensitivity and throughput to resolve complex samples and quantify low-abundance proteins. q-OT-IT Tribrid mass spectrometers, notably the Orbitrap Fusion Lumos, combine speed, resolution, and sensitivity to advance DIA workflows.
This study aims to demonstrate a DIA strategy on a q-OT-IT Tribrid MS system for complete quantification of whole cell lysates. A spectral library was generated from two non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) lines—one Erlotinib-sensitive, one resistant—followed by DIA-based quantification and comparative analysis.
Over 5200 proteins and 44000 peptides were quantified per run with CV <20%. The combined library comprised ~6700 proteins and ~60000 peptides. Orbitrap Fusion Lumos yielded ~25% more quantifiable proteins and peptides at low sample loads than the previous generation. DIA reproducibility showed median CV ~9.2%. Statistical comparison between Erlotinib-resistant and sensitive lines identified ~1200 proteins with >2-fold change (q<0.01). Pathway analysis revealed downregulation of MAPK components and upregulation of mTOR pathway effectors. Results correlated closely with orthogonal TMT and SILAC measurements.
Advancements may include refined isolation window schemes, higher scan speeds, library-free DIA, integration with machine learning for data interpretation, and adaptation to single-cell proteomics and clinical diagnostics.
DIA on the q-OT-IT Tribrid Orbitrap Fusion Lumos system enables comprehensive, reproducible quantification of complex proteomes with superior sensitivity and throughput compared to previous generations, facilitating advanced biological and translational studies.
LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/Orbitrap
IndustriesOther
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the topic
Data independent acquisition (DIA) offers comprehensive and reproducible proteome profiling by fragmenting all ions in defined m/z windows. Its application to whole cell lysates demands high sensitivity and throughput to resolve complex samples and quantify low-abundance proteins. q-OT-IT Tribrid mass spectrometers, notably the Orbitrap Fusion Lumos, combine speed, resolution, and sensitivity to advance DIA workflows.
Objectives and Overview of the Study
This study aims to demonstrate a DIA strategy on a q-OT-IT Tribrid MS system for complete quantification of whole cell lysates. A spectral library was generated from two non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) lines—one Erlotinib-sensitive, one resistant—followed by DIA-based quantification and comparative analysis.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
- Sample preparation: HeLa digest standard QC and NSCLC cell lysates reduced, alkylated, digested, spiked with Biognosys HRM peptides.
- Chromatography: Easy nLC 1000 nano-HPLC, reversed-phase C18 column, 120 min gradient (5–25% B, then 25–40% B).
- Library building: Orbitrap Fusion Lumos DDA MS, MS1 120 000 resolution, HCD MS/MS 30 000 resolution, 3 s cycle.
- DIA acquisition: 400–1000 m/z range, 40 windows of 15 Da, MS2 30 000 resolution, MS1 120 000 resolution, max inject 60 ms.
- Data analysis: SEQUEST HT in Proteome Discoverer 1.4 (1% FDR) to build library; Spectronaut 7 for DIA quantification, using dynamic iRT, interference correction, cross-run normalization, statistical filtering (q<0.01, CV<20%).
Main Results and Discussion
Over 5200 proteins and 44000 peptides were quantified per run with CV <20%. The combined library comprised ~6700 proteins and ~60000 peptides. Orbitrap Fusion Lumos yielded ~25% more quantifiable proteins and peptides at low sample loads than the previous generation. DIA reproducibility showed median CV ~9.2%. Statistical comparison between Erlotinib-resistant and sensitive lines identified ~1200 proteins with >2-fold change (q<0.01). Pathway analysis revealed downregulation of MAPK components and upregulation of mTOR pathway effectors. Results correlated closely with orthogonal TMT and SILAC measurements.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
- Deep proteome coverage with high reproducibility and throughput.
- Sensitivity to detect low-abundance proteins in whole cell lysates.
- Robust comparative analysis for drug response and biomarker discovery.
- Applicability in QA/QC and clinical proteomics workflows.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advancements may include refined isolation window schemes, higher scan speeds, library-free DIA, integration with machine learning for data interpretation, and adaptation to single-cell proteomics and clinical diagnostics.
Conclusion
DIA on the q-OT-IT Tribrid Orbitrap Fusion Lumos system enables comprehensive, reproducible quantification of complex proteomes with superior sensitivity and throughput compared to previous generations, facilitating advanced biological and translational studies.
References
- Bomgarden R, et al. Cancer Research 74(6), 1608–1617 (2014).
- Senko MW, et al. Analytical Chemistry 85(23), 11710–11714 (2013).
- Bruderer R, et al. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 14(3), Epub ahead of print (2015).
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