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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative analysis of the intra- and inter-individual variability of the normal urinary proteome.

Nagarjuna Nagaraj, +1 more
- 05 Jan 2011 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 2, pp 637-645
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TLDR
Determination of the normal fluctuation of individual urinary proteins should be useful in establishing significance thresholds in biomarker studies and allowed definition of a common and abundant set of 500 proteins that were readily detectable in all studied individuals.
Abstract
Urine is a readily and noninvasively obtainable body fluid. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics has shown that urine contains thousands of proteins. Urine is a potential source of biomarkers for diseases of proximal and distal tissues but it is thought to be more variable than the more commonly used plasma. By LC-MS/MS analysis on an LTQ-Orbitrap without prefractionation we characterized the urinary proteome of seven normal human donors over three consecutive days. Label-free quantification of triplicate single runs covered the urinary proteome to a depth of more than 600 proteins. The median coefficient of variation (cv) of technical replicates was 0.18. Interday variability was markedly higher with a cv of 0.48 and the overall variation of the urinary proteome between individuals was 0.66. Thus technical variability in our data was 7.5%, whereas intrapersonal variability contributed 45.5% and interpersonal variability contributed 47.1% to total variability. Determination of the normal fluctuation of individual urinary proteins should be useful in establishing significance thresholds in biomarker studies. Our data also allowed definition of a common and abundant set of 500 proteins that were readily detectable in all studied individuals. This core urinary proteome has a high proportion of secreted, membrane, and relatively high-molecular weight proteins.

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TL;DR: The y- axis label for Figure 1d was incorrect and the correct y-axis label should be .
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Trending Questions (1)
What is the common proteins in normal urine?

The common proteins in normal urine are referred to as the "core urinary proteome" and consist of a set of 500 proteins that were readily detectable in all studied individuals.