Are you an investigator who was assigned a bank heist?
Do you suspect a certain goat, recently out of the pen, with an alibi that seems a little too good to be true?
now also at www.proteomics.rocks
Are you an investigator who was assigned a bank heist?
Do you suspect a certain goat, recently out of the pen, with an alibi that seems a little too good to be true?
Wait. Where does thermolysin cut? Does everyone know that and that's why it isn't listed in the methods section of the paper? It's so common knowledge that the Wikipedia page doesn't list them explicitly either? Gemini, which is apparently now installed in my browser without my permission says it's Leu, Phe, Ile, Val, Ala, and Met, so I'll bet you that is NOT where it cuts. However, this is really cool, for real.
You chuck in the protein they set up and then you throw in your thermolysin and do your fast digestion and now you've got a pile of internal heavy labeled peptide standards. If you don't see them...the digestion didn't work! If you do see them, you can use them for your quantification! This group does a pile of targeted PRMs on an Orbitrap Exploris with an EvoSep on it. So high resolution discriminatory power of the mass spec and reproducible run times with no tinkering allowed.
I received some questions about my longer term impressions of the amazingly sensitive and somewhat fast TIMSTOF Ultra2.
It's been a year already? Yikes. I guess I'll reference my earlier TIMSTOF reviews.
Great stuff!
1) The sensitivity of this thing is still absolutely unreal. Multiple people are writing up papers on single cells ran on it with DIA label free and the numbers are cell type specific and amazing.
Even with a high loss, but very inexpensive and very fast sample prep, most cancer cell check in at well above 2,000 protein groups per cell and human hepatocytes are around 2,500. Throw in a big cohort and actual spectral libraries (non-predicted) and you can add 50% to those numbers. Most studies of >100 cells will have 5,000+ protein groups across the study. Some big cells like cultured human neurons will come in >7,000 on their own. Crazy.
Some small blood cells <10 microns have been a challenge, but if you've only got 80 pg of protein and we know our fast sample prep loses about 50pg, that's...involved..... someone FACs isolated 12 different cell types from patient blood and we struggled with getting 500 protein groups in 2 of the cell types. It's tough to tell what's going on from those levels of sample.
Not so great stuf!
1) Compass data analysis is still the only way you can do things like extract an XIC. Looking for a weird peptide? Good luck. As an aside, Biognosys sells a targeted quan package that we had for several months because I thought it would do that part for us. It will if you're doing prmPASEF, but it won't help you find a peptide in DIA or DDA data. It also doesn't help you predict the IMS so you basically have to identify your peptide to target it. So we traded that software back for more months of SpectroNaut.
2) We've went through more internal electrical components in the last 6 months than HPLC columns. That's not an exaggeration. This board, that board, that other board, the second board's power supply, the TIMS cartridge, etc., etc.,. This is rough because I knew we didn't have a very local FSE here. They have to come in from DC or Jersey or fly in from Bremen or California. So the downtime can be on the long side when they go down. I thought going into 2026 we basically had a brand new instrument thanks to the sleigh load of electric components we got over the holidays so I wasn't super stressed about a short lapse between warranty and service plan starting up but - there went another pile of electronics.....whoops. To be fair they are building one of the biggest hospitals in the country next door to us and we've had a couple of power outages. But...you start to wonder if they're getting these circuit boards from Alibaba....
3) There appear to be even less support people in the field today. This one is a real surprise given the fact that it looks like the company has been doing really well and the prices of some instruments have increased more than 200%. You'd think that would equal a higher number of apps scientists and engineers in the field, but it appears to be just the opposite. The ones we have are INCREDIBLE. But you get the impression that they never sleep or get a day off because there are two of them for planet earth.
4) Look, I'm going to complain about absolutely everything. And I have absolutely zero regret for this fit-for-my-lab purpose instrument. It's an incredible precision instrument for what it does. We locked down a full workflow 8 months ago and we just do biological discovery on this thing. Same prep, same column, same method and the papers in preparation are a million times better than anything I've ever done. It's nice to have time to write because your one instrument is down, but there is a point where you have to look back at 50-ish weeks of ownership and start counting the weeks that the front of the instrument has been bright red doom and panic a little.
5) I did a lot of searching as well, and unlike other instruments there still appears to be no second party field apps support. That's a bummer because in some places you can go to a second party like ZefSci and get superior field apps support than what the vendor offers for a lot less money. If you know of someone who services these things PLEASE LET ME KNOW! I'd switch in a heartbeat.
We used to have a pile of them. Ion A is 10x higher than ion B in these two matrices, you could extract that a bunch of ways, but that's largely fallen off.
I'm also excited to see how many metabolites look real in direct injection in an Exploris 480. The intrascan linear dynamic range of a D20 Orbitrap is one of the lowest you can find in mass spectrometry so if this looks like it works you could do a lot with it. (Assuming the package works and is supported, of course!)
For real, I've been telling people about this conversation since we recorded it a while back. Snot is way cooler than you'd guess.
The fact that some labs have some weird background ions that other labs don't (check my repositories for Pug keratin! There's tons of it!) isn't news. Someone a while back showed they could tell when a study was done in the winter due to the amount of wool peptides ionized in their deposited data. I forget who that was.
But this new paper in JASMS shows that it's not just proteomics and peptides. It can even be those nasty adduct things that everyone outside of one group in Madison, Wisconsin ignores is even a thing in proteomics.
Maybe this was here before? I'm not going to look, but it's definitely out now in JPR.
It makes sense in my head, though. The same way that a single population of a million ions ionized at the exact same second might end up being distributed between mostly +2 charged, some +3 and maybe a barely detectable number of +4. Why wouldn't that population of peptides dissolved in acidic buffer also have 2 different possible shapes (or more?) Is that charge linked in some way? Would make sense. The authors suggest a simple calculator for predicting both modes - which would be amazing - but it doesn't appear to be in the Github. https://github.com/cox-labs/CCS - maybe it's coming? Or maybe I don't have nearly enough time today and all the maths in the paper scared me a little? Probably.
I'm legitimately knocking out a couple of blogposts to get my brain fired up for writing and my hands used to the new (quieter) keyboard I brought to a super intensive 3 day writing camp. R01 resubmit peer pressure time! As you might guess, both R01s I should be writing on are about the human liver and not honey bees, but you probably have a dumb way of doing things as well.
Where the f' is the control key? I'd rather look for it here. AND honey bees are super cool!
Did you know that worker and drones (which I thought were the same thing) develop at very different rates? Neither did I. Do I care? Right now I do. And these authors did and that's what really matters. I'm pretty sure it isn't a great time to be a honey farmer person.
Want to talk about an experimental sampling procedure that doesn't sound like fun? These authors collected 1,000 developing workers and the same number of developing drones from at least 8 different time points, up to 70 hours. I feel like a gif should go in here, but that would definitely make it clear to everyone around me that I'm not working on my grants. I'm warming up my brain!
The sample prep is ...interesting....and kind of old fashioned, but that's how they've been doing it in their group. Acetone precipitation and a lot of urea. Probably there's lots of weird stuff in the developing bees. Would I have put them in liquid N2, smacked them with a hammer and S-trapped it and gotten the same or better results? We'll never know, but that's how I'd do it.
The boring stuff is well-described, which is a refreshing change of pace this year. QE HF ran in top20 mode and a gradient I could reproduce without guessing. Yay MCP reviewers! Downstream analysis in PEAKS against a surprisingly complete sounding FASTA. Solid work all around and - screw it. -
8 time points!
Interesting! When this group talks about -omics they even include lipids and metabolites. Worth taking a look at for sure.
The link to the web portal in the paper appears to need a user name and passcode, but I ain't got time for that.