sodium-acetate--anhydrous and hydrazine

sodium-acetate--anhydrous has been researched along with hydrazine* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sodium-acetate--anhydrous and hydrazine

ArticleYear
Optimizing performance of glycopeptide capture for plasma proteomics.
    Journal of proteome research, 2010, Apr-05, Volume: 9, Issue:4

    Selective capture of glycopolypeptides followed by release and analysis of the former glycosylation-site peptides has been shown to have promise for reducing the complexity of body fluids such as blood for biomarker discovery. In this work, a protocol based on capture of polypeptides containing a N-linked carbohydrate from human plasma using commercially available magnetic beads coupled with hydrazide chemistry was optimized and partially automated through the use of a KingFisher magnetic particle processor. Comparison of bead-based glycocapture at the protein-level vs the peptide-level revealed differences in the specificity, reproducibility, and absolute number of former glycosylation-site peptides detected. Evaluation of a range of capture and elution conditions led to an optimized protocol with a 24% intraday and 30% interday CV and a glycopeptide capture specificity of 99%. Depleting the plasma of 14 high abundance proteins improved detection sensitivity by approximately 1 order of magnitude compared to nondepleted plasma and resulted in an increase of 24% in the number of identified glycoproteins. The sensitivity of SPEG for detection of glycoproteins in depleted, non-fractionated plasma was found to be in the 10-100 pmol/mL range corresponding to glycoprotein levels ranging from 100's of nanograms/mL to 10's of micrograms/mL. Despite high capture specificity, the total number of glycoproteins detected and the sensitivity of SPEG in plasma is surprisingly limited.

    Topics: Chromatography, Liquid; Glycopeptides; Glycoproteins; Humans; Hydrazines; Magnetics; Mass Spectrometry; Microspheres; Proteomics; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Sodium Acetate; Sodium Chloride; Solid Phase Extraction

2010