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2-D hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography-RP separation in urinary proteomics--minimizing variability through improved downstream workflow compatibility.

TLDR
The optimized and "streamlined" complex method has shown potential for use in future urinary proteomic studies and was tested in an extensive proteomic experiment on a kidney-transplanted patient.
Abstract
Optimization of every step in a bottom-up urinary proteomics approach was studied with respect to maximize the protein recovery and making the downstream steps in the workflow fully compatible without compromising on the amount of information obtained. Sample enrichment and desalting using centrifugal filtration (5 kDa cut-off) yielded protein recoveries up to 97% when 8 M urea was used. Although yielding lower recoveries (88%), addition of Tris-HCl/NaCl was considered a better choice due to good down-stream compatibility. The consecutive depletion of HSA, using an immunoaffinity column was successfully adapted for use in urine. Separation of the trypsin generated peptides in an off-line 2-D chromatographic system consisting of a hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography column, followed by a RP chromatography column showed a high peak capacity and good repeatability in addition to a high degree of orthogonality. All operations were modified in order to keep sample handling between every step to a minimum, reducing the variability of each process. In order to test the suitability of the full method in an extensive proteomic experiment, a urine sample from a kidney-transplanted patient was analyzed (n=6). The total variability of the method was identified with RSD values ranging from 11 to 30%. Eventually, we identified a total of 1668 peptides and 438 proteins from a single urine sample despite the use of low-resolution MS/MS equipment. The optimized and “streamlined” complex method has shown potential for use in future urinary proteomic studies.

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Searching for biomarkers of acute rejection in
renal transplant recipients development and
optimization of a urinary proteomic approach
Thesis for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor
by
Håvard Loftheim
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry and Department of Pharmaceutical
Biosciences
School of Pharmacy
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences
University of Oslo
Norway

© Håvard Loftheim, 2011
Series of dissertations submitted to the
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, University of Oslo
No. 1108
ISSN 1501-7710
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without permission.
Cover: Inger Sandved Anfinsen.
Printed in Norway: AIT Oslo AS.
Produced in co-operation with Unipub.
The thesis is produced by Unipub merely in connection with the
thesis defence. Kindly direct all inquiries regarding the thesis to the copyright
holder or the unit which grants the doctorate.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
LIST OF PAPERS
ABSTRACT
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
1
Introduction ...................................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Kidney transplantation ............................................................................................. 2
1.1.1 Kidney transplantation in general and the status in Norway ..................................... 2
1.1.2 Acute rejections ................................................................................................. 3
1.2 Proteomics .................................................................................................................. 4
1.2.1 Sample preparation in urinary proteomics.............................................................. 5
1.2.2 Proteolytic digestion of proteins ........................................................................... 6
1.2.3 LC-MS/MS of proteins/peptides ........................................................................... 7
1.2.4 Quantification in urinary proteomics ................................................................... 12
1.2.5 Data acquisition ............................................................................................... 15
2 Aim of the study .............................................................................................................. 18
3 Results and discussion .................................................................................................... 19
3.1 Sample preparation and separation in urinary proteomics ................................ 19
3.1.1 Sample collection and storage ............................................................................ 20
3.1.2 Sample preparation ........................................................................................... 20
3.1.3 Chromatographic separation of the peptides ......................................................... 23
3.1.4 Variability of the method: step by step evaluation of the workflow ......................... 27
3.2 Tryptic digestion & protein identification ............................................................ 28
3.2.1 Optimization of digestion conditions using immobilized trypsin beads .................... 28
3.2.2 In-solution digestion vs. digestion on immobilized trypsin beads ............................ 29
3.2.3 Digestion efficiency in human urine ................................................................... 30
3.2.4 On-column reduction, alkylation and tryptic digestion .......................................... 31

3.2.5 Protein identification by different analytical platforms .......................................... 32
3.3 Accelerated quantification in urinary proteomics utilizing
18
O-labeling ........... 33
3.3.1 pH dependency and reaction time optimization .................................................... 34
3.3.2 Integration of digestion and labeling using immobilized trypsin beads .................... 36
3.3.3 Efficiency of the optimized procedure in urine samples ......................................... 39
3.4 Differential expressed proteins following acute rejection in renal transplant
recipients ............................................................................................................................. 42
3.4.1 Choice of patients and samples .......................................................................... 42
3.4.2 Up-regulated proteins ....................................................................................... 43
3.4.3 Comparison with earlier published data ............................................................... 51
3.5 Future perspectives ................................................................................................. 51
4 Concluding remarks ....................................................................................................... 53
5 References .................................................................................................................... .... 55

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The presented work was performed at the department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry and the
department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Oslo in co-
operation with both the department of Transplant Medicine at Oslo University Hospital and
the department of Chemistry, University of Oslo.
First of all I would like to thank my two supervisors Professor Léon Reubsaet and Professor
Anders Åsberg. I am very grateful for the opportunity to work under your guidance in the
borderline between two exciting research fields. Thank you for your great support and
enthusiasm; during these four years I have always been at my most inspired after having
meetings with you, seeing new opportunities and eager to test our new ideas in the laboratory.
I would like to thank my co-authors Thien Nguyen, Bjørn Winther, Bao Tran, Helle Malerød,
Elsa Lundanes, Tyge Greibrokk, Jadranka Vukovic, Karsten Midtvedt, Anders Hartmann,
Anna Varberg Reisæter, Pål Falck, Hallvard Holdaas and Trond Jenssen for your valuable
contribution to the work. A special thanks to my master students Thien, Malin and Tam; you
have made important contributions to my research.
I would also like to thank my colleagues for creating a great social working environment.
Your company has been much appreciated whether it has been in the laboratory or at
congresses and department trips.
Finally a warm thank you goes to my lovely wife Ragna for all the support you have given
me during this work. Spending time with you and our wonderful children Mari and Sverre
will always be the highlight of the day. You always make me smile when I come home
regardless of how bad the mass spectrometer has treated me during the day.
Oslo, August 2011
Håvard Loftheim

Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Urinary proteomic shotgun approach for identification of potential acute rejection biomarkers in renal transplant recipients

TL;DR: In this paper, serial urine samples in the early post transplant phase from 6 patients with biopsy verified acute rejections and 6 age-matched controls without clinical signs of rejection were analyzed by shotgun proteomics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography as second dimension in multidimensional chromatography with an anionic trapping strategy: application to prostate-specific antigen quantification.

TL;DR: A new two dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC-SRM) method for the quantitation of prostate specific antigen (PSA) in human plasma that is compatible with the required sensitivity for the clinically relevant plasma-based PSA tests.
Journal ArticleDOI

MRM validation of targeted nonglycosylated peptides from N-glycoprotein biomarkers using direct trypsin digestion of undepleted human plasma

TL;DR: A rapid, simple, and reproducible MRM-based validation method for serological glycoprotein biomarkers in clinical use was developed by targeting the nonglycosylated tryptic peptides adjacent to N-glycosylation sites, indicating that these could be effective biomarkers for hepatocellular carcinoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urinary proteomics and drug discovery in chronic kidney disease: a new perspective.

TL;DR: Specific cohorts of patients are suggested where this early signature of fibrosis may be simpler to be identified and these biomarkers are therefore biomarkers of early tubulo-interstitial fibrosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

A proteomic evaluation of urinary changes associated with cardiopulmonary bypass.

TL;DR: The results suggest that activation of the innate immune responses occur during cardiac bypass surgery, and the introduction of SWATH into the workflow offers a sample and instrument sparing approach to obtaining consistent in-depth sample analysis.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding

TL;DR: This assay is very reproducible and rapid with the dye binding process virtually complete in approximately 2 min with good color stability for 1 hr with little or no interference from cations such as sodium or potassium nor from carbohydrates such as sucrose.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative mass spectrometry in proteomics: a critical review

TL;DR: This review critically examine the more commonly used quantitative mass spectrometry methods for their individual merits and discusses challenges in arriving at meaningful interpretations of quantitative proteomic data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrophilic interaction chromatography.

TL;DR: The review attempts to summarize the ongoing discussion on the separation mechanism and gives an overview of the stationary phases used and the applications addressed with this separation mode in LC.
Journal ArticleDOI

Orthogonality of separation in two-dimensional liquid chromatography.

TL;DR: The RP-RP system (employing significantly different pH in both RP separation dimensions) had the highest practical peak capacity of 2D-LC systems investigated and was found to provide suitable orthogonality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for chronic rejection in renal allograft recipients.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that acute rejection, CsA dosage < 5 mg/kg/day at 1 year, and infection are the major risk factors for the development of chronic rejection.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Searching for biomarkers of acute rejection in renal transplant recipients – development and optimization of a urinary proteomic approach" ?

The main steps were desalting/enrichment by cut-off centrifugation ( 5 kDa ), albumin depletion and tryptic digestion followed by 2D-LC-MS. In Paper II enzymatic digestion using immobilized trypsin beads was investigated. In Paper III a multidimensional on-line system including Strong Anion Exchange Chromatography ( SAX ) separation of native proteins, reduction, alkylation, C4 separation and tryptic digestion of the alkylated proteins followed by MS detection was tested as an alternative to the off-line method developed. In Paper IV proteolytic O-labeling of peptides was investigated and improved in order to optimize the labeling efficiency and accelerate the process. On-line tryptic digestion was satisfactory for several proteins but needs further optimization to cover the full proteome. The system was evaluated using both model proteins and human urine sample and has shown potential as a tool to identify biomarkers offering short analysis time and minimum manual sample handling. 

Further prospective studies are therefore needed in larger populations, where biopsies also are performed in the control patients, in order to elucidate on the involvement of these proteins in acute rejection and their potential usability as diagnostic biomarkers. The use of urine and a trend towards an increase of proteins levels prior to deterioration of graft function potentially opens for early, specific and non-invasive detection of acute rejection episodes.