L13 - High-throughput research: proteomics Flashcards
What is high throughput methodology?
Taking established methodology & re-applying it to an automated system
Transcriptome
mRNA molecules of the cell
Metabolome
The metabolic products of the cell, that is, all the metabolites
Secretome
The secreted proteins of a cell
Phosphome
Total phosphorylated proteins of a cell
Kinome
All kinases of the cell
Is the genome constant in an organism?
YES
But the transcriptome & then therefore, all the others following, changes due to what is required by the cell
Bioinformatics can be seen as the control & analysis of the information
What is proteomics?
The study of the proteome
What is the proteome?
The total cellular protein content of the cell
Set of PROTEins encoded by the genOME
Stages in examining the proteome
SEPARATE OR FRACTIONATE
– Common approach is to carry out electrophoresis
– Also possible to use liquid chromatography
IDENTIFICATION
– The pI (isoelectric point) & MW matches on the databases
– Western blot is possible to carry out
– Sequencing
Often compare proteomes of cells in 2 different ‘states’ or origins
1) Separate proteins wither by 2DE Gel Electrophoresis of MDLC (Multi-dimentional liquid chromatography)
2) Compare & identify differences
3) Identify proteins
4) Form hypothesis
Why would you compare proteomes?
Cells in different states have different proteomes – eg. disease or stage of development
If we can understand this change we may understand what is happening to the cell
Can be compared against a ‘standard’ in a database
What is peptide mass finger-printing?
Peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) (also known as protein fingerprinting) is an analytical technique for protein identification in which the unknown protein of interest is first cleaved into smaller peptides, whose absolute masses can be accurately measured with a mass spectrometer
General methodology of protein fingerprinting
1) Collect control and ‘state’ protein samples
2) Separate proteins - 2DE/chromatography
3) Compare control and ‘state’ gels to determine spots that have changed
4) Pick spots (i.e. cut out from gel!) that have changed
5) Digest the protein in the gel plug
6) Separate peptides by mass spectrometry
7) Identify proteins from mass of peptides produced
8) Carry out mass spectrometry peptide sequencing
Why is it harder to prepare samples of proteins than DNA samples?
DNA is pretty robust & easy to purify - takes a lot to destroy it
Proteins are fragile – short lived & easy to break down – constantly modified by post-translational modifications
Have to be a lot more careful
Have to try to maintain the tertiary structure