US HUPO is letting us do a big unsupervised season and so far, I'm happy to say I'm enjoying it. Listen to Episode 101 with Glendon Parker, wherever you get podcast things.
now also at www.proteomics.rocks
US HUPO is letting us do a big unsupervised season and so far, I'm happy to say I'm enjoying it. Listen to Episode 101 with Glendon Parker, wherever you get podcast things.
So...when this PI is in the lab, he commonly skips the alkylation and reduction steps. Not just because he doesn't know where the reagents are, but also because I spent a couple of years studying drugs that bind cysteines. True story, about 1/4 of the pharmacology faculty at Pitt seem to study similar drugs.
This group shows that it might be a good idea even beyond cysteine alkylating compounds!
For real, what are all those other cysteines doing? Just being sulfury? Sulfur isn't the most abundant thing and it only gets incorporated as a nutrient by plants through a painstaking process that starts with a slow oxidation by bacteria. Seems like a lot of work for something that just does a couple of things, right? Evolution is too cheap for many single use materials.
Super cool paper and definitely worth thinking about when you can't find that DTT thing on your first pass through the -20C? Chemical cabinet? I honestly don't know.
Okay, so this might be more interesting to me right this second than it normally would be, but I'm very glad to have this group's notes and findings!
Y'all know what organoids are, right?
Some people got together like 20-ish years ago and were like "yo, I wonder if it actually makes sense that all these human cells are growing in 2 dimensions...?" For real, like, they don't grow like that inside a human being, outside of perhaps Lady Cassandra....
SO.
What if.
You (not you, but some NASA affiliated people, unless that IS you. Then you, obviously!)
PUT ORGANOID IN OUTER SPACE???
(They did single organoid, so I assume it's singular when referencing them?) Sounds funnier, at the very least.
We send way dumber shit than that to outer space all the time. A ketamine addict who runs a racist social media platform keeps failing to get rockets into space that probably just have pictures he colored of himself inside them. Who knows? Certainly not ol' Space Ketamine Karen.
What was I typing abou...THIS STUDY THAT I SAW PREVIEWED BY ALINE AT US HUPO!
Okay, so maybe what we actually need is 500 parallel ion traps within our instruments!!!
This is just an early proof of concept of teeny tiny ion traps operating under the control of individual (or individual clusters?) of GPU (CUDA-type?) cores. I've never seen anything at all like this so it jumped the queue of things I meant to type about this week.
You sure as hell couldn't get 4,700 protein groups at 500 SPD from 200ng of K562! Make no mistake thsi is far higher throughput than the "next gen" proteomics solutions out there. This is more than 10x more samples/day than Illumina's new protein prep - AND this thing can QUANTIFY proteins. Friendly reminder that Illumina Protein Prep only detects proteins. It does NOT QUANTIFY proteins in any meaningful way. O-Link can provide meaningful quantitative responses, but on a single instrument setup 500 SPD is going to be 2x - 4x the throughput (though I've heard this is improving with 1536 well plate preps or something).
Something weird on the 7600 was that it had a lot of the optics from the earlier generation QQQs. The 8600 doesn't. It's got the new stuff and on top of the speed they're showing off, this thing can hit solid coverage at single cell equivalents. They even prep single HeLa cells in 1 cell, 3 cell, 10 cell and stuff and it looks good. Also there is some 3 proteome digest stuff that looks pretty solid - obviously better quantitative accuracy at the lower speeds. CVs look decent. If you could nitpick these results you could say that the ion mobility equipped instruments do get cleaner spectra and tighter CVs but - for real - SCIEX seems to have a legitimate competitor for the other company flagships. I was about to make a bunch of highlander jokes following some recent software company acquisitions but it looks like there is still legitimate competition out there in the world!
...well...this is frustratingly brilliant....
This system relies on using E.coli to generate the peptides that you think are there which can be directly informed from your genomics data - to actually make the endogenous peptides that you might be able to see - if they are there. Double dash!
Then you can have the real spectral libraries for that mutant form that would be really super amazingly cool to see on the surface of that cancer cell. If it is there you see it by mass spec and then you can design a CAR(R)-T thingamabob or immunotherapeutic whatchamacallit to those cells.
For real, just intimidatingly shockingly clever, because it really seems super obvious once you get 3 pages into it. Not that I could have pulled it off (please see thingamabobs above and genetic expressoin in little poop bacteria seems like weird magic these days), but it does seem like someone should have thought of it.
This is a solid new study with a noteworthy method combination.
I was looking for how they would normalize the glycopeptides against the whole protein concentrations and they actually include that part in the method section! Our puppy just scratched our kid, sounds minor, but I've got to stop typing here even though I haven't got to how they used some combination of ETD and HCD to do the glycan and TMT based quan. Worth checking out though!
For this study something called a Q Exactive HUMR with charge detection was used to work out these assembled protein complexes. Flipping everything I know about Orbitrap intact protein work on it's head, this group ran the charge detection thingy at 200,000 resolution with direct nanoinfusion for possibly as long as 30 minutes.
I've done a lot of intact mAB work, somehow almost always out of the goodness of my heart. Actually - advice to younger scientists who might be way too nice and willing to help people - If anyone wants you to get a good intact mass of an mAB - especially if they are a startup - payment up front every single time. And if they said they worked with me, definitely reach out so I can tell you about how I took work from a nice CRO or three and got $0.00 for it and I'll suggest you charge them 100x what you're thinking.
Wait. What was I typing about? OH YEAH!
Okay, so on mABs on a regular Orbitrap I generally run 15,000 resolution, when KRAS will look great at 70,000. Intact mABs are 10x larger than KRAS and those spare molecules in the Orbitrap wreak havoc on something that large. On an Exactive EMR, the biggest thing I ever did was maybe 250kDa and I had to run it at 7,000 resolution or something to get it to resolve
So whatever this charge thingy flips that upside down! 200,000 resolution! That's crazy! And they step through collision energies to get data on this heavily glycosylated complex! Super cool work.