Balancing sensitivity and throughput in single-cell proteomics using low-nanoflow LC-MS
Posters | 2025 | Thermo Fisher Scientific | ASMSInstrumentation
Profiling the proteome of individual cells and sub-nanogram samples is critical for uncovering cellular heterogeneity and understanding complex biological processes. Nano-flow liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (nLC-MS) at flow rates below 300 nL/min greatly improves ionization efficiency and detection sensitivity. However, traditional low-flow workflows suffer from limited sample throughput, constraining large-scale or high-frequency analyses. This study addresses the sensitivity–throughput trade-off by developing and benchmarking high-throughput nLC-MS methods suited for single-cell and ultra-limited sample proteomics.
This work presents seven optimized nanoLC-MS workflows for label-free quantitation (LFQ) of limited material, including single-cell proteomics. The goals were to balance deep proteome coverage with high sample throughput, compare data acquisition strategies (DDA, wide-window DDA, DIA), implement a trap-and-elute (T&E) approach to accelerate loading, and assess the impact of advanced mass analyzers on sensitivity and throughput.
The experimental strategy combined precise sample preparation, varied LC-MS configurations, and multiple acquisition modes:
Throughput and cycle times varied by workflow:
The optimized platform enables high-sensitivity analysis of picogram-level samples and high-throughput profiling of single cells or small populations. It supports both label-free and multiplexed workflows, facilitating quantitative studies in cell biology, clinical research, QA/QC, and industrial analytics. The trap-and-elute design reduces cycle times without compromising proteome depth.
Further integration of advanced mass analyzers, refined microfluidics, and higher-plex isobaric tagging strategies (e.g., TMTpro 35-plex) will push throughput beyond 2,000 cells/day. Automation of sample preparation, real-time data acquisition adjustments, and improved bioinformatics will drive single-cell proteomics toward routine large-scale applications in systems biology and precision medicine.
This study delivers a versatile nanoLC-MS framework that successfully balances sensitivity and throughput for proteomics of minute samples. By comparing acquisition modes and introducing a trap-and-elute workflow, the platform achieves up to 120 SPD with deep proteome coverage. Advanced instrumentation further elevates sensitivity, supporting robust single-cell and sub-nanogram analyses.
LC/HRMS, LC/Orbitrap, LC/MS/MS, LC/MS, Software
IndustriesProteomics
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Profiling the proteome of individual cells and sub-nanogram samples is critical for uncovering cellular heterogeneity and understanding complex biological processes. Nano-flow liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (nLC-MS) at flow rates below 300 nL/min greatly improves ionization efficiency and detection sensitivity. However, traditional low-flow workflows suffer from limited sample throughput, constraining large-scale or high-frequency analyses. This study addresses the sensitivity–throughput trade-off by developing and benchmarking high-throughput nLC-MS methods suited for single-cell and ultra-limited sample proteomics.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work presents seven optimized nanoLC-MS workflows for label-free quantitation (LFQ) of limited material, including single-cell proteomics. The goals were to balance deep proteome coverage with high sample throughput, compare data acquisition strategies (DDA, wide-window DDA, DIA), implement a trap-and-elute (T&E) approach to accelerate loading, and assess the impact of advanced mass analyzers on sensitivity and throughput.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The experimental strategy combined precise sample preparation, varied LC-MS configurations, and multiple acquisition modes:
- Sample Preparation: HeLa digest aliquots (0.25–10 µL injections, 250 pg–5 ng) spiked with PRTC standard; single-cell samples processed in 384-well plates by a one-pot, label-free protocol; TMTpro 18-plex labeled HeLa for multiplex single-cell assays.
- Chromatography: Thermo Vanquish Neo UHPLC with 50 µm × 15 cm C18 column at 100 nL/min; direct injection and trap-and-elute workflows using a 300 µm × 5 mm trap in backward-flush mode; 10 µm emitter at 50 °C.
- Mass Spectrometry: Thermo Orbitrap Exploris 480 or Orbitrap Astral with FAIMS Pro interface; MS1 resolution 120 k, MS2 resolution 6 k; DIA isolation windows varied from 20 m/z to 100 m/z.
- Data Acquisition: Data-dependent acquisition (DDA), wide-window DDA (WW-DDA), library-free DIA; optimized MS2 injection times and scan speeds.
- Data Analysis: Proteome Discoverer 2.5 with SEQUEST HT and INFERYS rescoring; CHIMERYS in Proteome Discoverer 3.0 for chimeric DDA spectra; Spectronaut 17 for DIA processing; FDR < 1% at peptide and protein levels.
Main Results and Discussion
Throughput and cycle times varied by workflow:
- Direct Injection: 24–72 samples per day (SPD) with 20–30 min cycles; MS utilization 55–70%.
- Trap-and-Elute: 100 SPD (14.4 min cycle) and 120 SPD (12 min cycle); MS utilization up to 78%.
- DDA (2-step SEQUEST + INFERYS): ~1,500 protein groups.
- WW-DDA (CHIMERYS): >1,800 protein groups.
- DIA (SN17): >2,600 protein groups.
- Trap-and-Elute at 100 SPD: ~2,200 protein groups; as little as 60 pg yielded >1,100 proteins.
- Orbitrap Astral with pulled-tip column: >5,000 proteins at 100 SPD from 250 pg.
- WW-DIA open MS1 window: ~3,000 proteins in 20 min, covering >4 orders of magnitude dynamic range.
- LFQ-DIA QC across labs: >1,200 protein IDs per cell; individual HeLa cells: ~1,700 proteins.
- TMTpro 18-plex SCoPE-MS: >800 cells/day with >1,100 protein IDs.
- TMTpro 35-plex potential: up to 864 cells/day and projected >1,600 cells/day.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The optimized platform enables high-sensitivity analysis of picogram-level samples and high-throughput profiling of single cells or small populations. It supports both label-free and multiplexed workflows, facilitating quantitative studies in cell biology, clinical research, QA/QC, and industrial analytics. The trap-and-elute design reduces cycle times without compromising proteome depth.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Further integration of advanced mass analyzers, refined microfluidics, and higher-plex isobaric tagging strategies (e.g., TMTpro 35-plex) will push throughput beyond 2,000 cells/day. Automation of sample preparation, real-time data acquisition adjustments, and improved bioinformatics will drive single-cell proteomics toward routine large-scale applications in systems biology and precision medicine.
Conclusion
This study delivers a versatile nanoLC-MS framework that successfully balances sensitivity and throughput for proteomics of minute samples. By comparing acquisition modes and introducing a trap-and-elute workflow, the platform achieves up to 120 SPD with deep proteome coverage. Advanced instrumentation further elevates sensitivity, supporting robust single-cell and sub-nanogram analyses.
References
- Manuel Matzinger et al., Analytical Chemistry, 2023, 95(9), 4435–4445
- Karel Stejskal et al., Analytical Chemistry, 2021, 93(25), 8704–8710
- Runsheng Zheng et al., Analytical Chemistry, 2023, 95(51), 18673–18678
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