Anal. Chem., 73 (17), 4063 -4070, 2001. 10.1021/ac0101858 S0003-2700(01)00185-8
Web Release Date: July 31, 2001

Copyright © 2001 American Chemical Society

Virtual 2-D Gel Electrophoresis: Visualization and Analysis of the E. coli Proteome by Mass Spectrometry

Rachel R. Ogorzalek Loo,* James D. Cavalcoli, Ruth A. VanBogelen, Charles Mitchell, Joseph A. Loo, Brian Moldover, and Philip C. Andrews*

Department of Biological Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0606, and Pfizer Global Research and Development, 2800 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105

Received for review February 14, 2001. Accepted July 3, 2001.

Abstract:

Mass spectrometric surface analysis of isoelectric focusing gels provides an ultrasensitive approach to proteome analysis. This "virtual 2-D gel" approach, in which mass spectrometry is substituted for the size-based separation of SDS-PAGE, provides advantages in mass resolution and accuracy over classical 2-D gels and can be readily automated. Protein identities can be postulated from molecular mass (±0.1-0.2% for proteins of <50 kDa in size) and pI (±0.3 pH unit) and confirmed by MALDI in-source decay of the intact protein (providing sequence spanning up to 43 residues) or by peptide mass mapping following gel-wide chemical cleavage. Additionally, posttranslational modifications such as fatty acid acylation can be detected by the mass-resolved heterogeneity of component hydrocarbon chains. Sensitivity was evaluated by comparing the number of proteins detected by this method to equivalently loaded silver-stained 2-D gels. In the 5.7-6.0 pH range, E. coli is predicted to contain 435 proteins; virtual 2-D gels found 250 proteins ranging from >2 to <120 kDa in size present at levels to tens of femtomoles, as compared to the 100 proteins found by silver-staining 2-D gels. Extrapolating this result to the total theoretical proteome suggests that this technology is capable of detecting over 2500 E. coli proteins.


Download the full text: PDF | HTML