News in Proteomics Research
now also at www.proteomics.rocks
Friday, April 3, 2026
Proteomics Show 102 - Dr. Jan Mulder and BRAINS
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Why do immunopeptidomics anyway? And what comes after?
Do you wonder why we don't just do immunopeptidomics by genomics technologies? Besides the obvious fact that it's impossible? Or just wonder what happens after you've spent a really long time working on the crappiest peptides you've ever tried to fragment?
Then this is the review for you (and you)!
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
I'm convinced! Illumina Protein Prep might be a game changer!
If I have a super power as a person or a scientist, it is that I'm very okay with being wrong. It helps that it happens all the time and the fact that I have friends and a domestic partner who are way way way smarter than me. I'm used to be the dumbest person in the room and I can just discover that I'm wrong.
And boy - was I wrong about this new Illumina Protein Prep thing.
I thought it was just a repackaging of SomaScan, a product that has had the strangest propensity for avoiding the very simple experiment that would make me stop making fun of it. After a decade I was starting to think that 1) They were doing it just to get on my nerves or 2) They had done it - and aptamer off binding could not be used to estimate a protein concentration in a complex mixture in any meaningful way (translation - it doesn't work).
But Illumina has been killing it for years and years! We have petabytes full of Illumina short read sequencing data all over the world. Sure, you could argue they missed the long read sequencing bandwagon and that is a little weird. But a behemoth of an organization like that has the money and the people to avoid becoming complacent.
So when Illumina acquired whatever SomaScan had changed their name to that month, you had to think "wait. maybe there IS something to it!"
And here I sit while turning a TOF after a power outage that caused me to miss the last day of a conference. Embarrassed and corrected.
The A problem with aptamers is that they are only linear within an EXTREMELY narrow linear dynamic range. If sample A has x target and sample B has 2x target, you can basically see that difference. If sample C has 10x target, you're probably okay, but you're at the end of the dynamic range. If sample D has 1,000,000,0000x more protein, you get about the same value as sample C. More on that and other problems with aptamers here.
This new product is so much more than the original product it was based on - because after you have your aptamer readout you NOW do NGS sequencing on tags on those aptamers. And then you do the quantification off of the NGS readout! By counting the reads! And we all know that there is no better way of doing quantification than counting things. And if there is, it's probably counting an indirect measurement of an indirect measurement. Wait. Didn't we do something like that before?
Okay, but that doesn't fix the linear dynamic range issue of the original measurement. But now you've got rock solid absolutely amazing quan on those narrow measurements, right?
And this is where I change my mind about this whole thing!
This group took a good hard look at precision and accuracy in a pile of different ways to do RNASeq, with a special emphasis on low input techniques like scSeq and scNSeq, but lots of work on the bulk as well.
The CVs ARE AMAZING.
Less than 1! Across the board! Okay, fancy mass spec people, tell me how many times that you've reported a CV <1 across an entire dataset. I'd love to say that I only report out proteins with less than 10%, but we use a 20% CV cutoff.
Oh...fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck..... they mean CV%, right? Not CV 1 = 100%??
Monday, March 30, 2026
On site at ABRF 2026!
This is the first time ABRF has happened in a city that I live in! Man, once upon a time there were so many proteomics people that we had competing initiatives. We were standardizing methods and standardizing standards and comparing software and it was all a lot of fun and it all kind of stopped. But you know what you can talk about anywhere you want to?
Single Cell Proteomics! Dr. Kyle Swovick, photo taken from the front row, organized a session and, for a small conference with 3 competing sessions at a meeting with sessions with riveting titles like "asset management" I'd call it a hit. Definitely better attendance than last year's session I organized that was called "Yo, Justin Walley and I are totally going to do SCP in core facilities, hold our beers". This was sort of a victory lap for me because we now have paying customers in our core at Pitt for SCP and the first data delivered received this response, that I don't mind at all.
Kyle's core at Rochester also does it! It's a real thing! Kyle talked about what a pain in the butt it was to reproduce methods from the literature that largely forgot important details and I called the authors of a preprint that said "5,000 proteins per cell" in the title "a bunch of assholes" on video for a second year in a row!
And we had great questions and interactions.
Was that all the proteomics? Nope! It sure wasn't!
Someone who isn't an ABRF member nominated John Yates for the lifetime achievement in BioAnalysis award, and they were like "wait. didn't we give that to him 15 years ago? Holy shit. Why haven't we given him this award already??" So they did.
And I got to be like 4 rows back for John's history of protein mass spectrometry. Super funny with xeroxes of papers (younger scientists, we used to go to the library and find papers in actual journals and photocopy them) and a lot of self-effacing humor and reflection. And cuttings from papers of the past that seem either predictive or ridiculous in the context of today. Or both.
Super fun thing I was very glad to catch.
The rest of ABRF? Hmmm....there are some cool new LCM solutions I'm investigating, and some cell sorters. And a great convention center!
Maybe I'll write more about it when it's over.
As an aside -
Conference travel in the US is really really hard right now. Last weekend at BWI TSA screening was taking over 5 (FIVE) hours. I've flown out of BWI easily 300 times in my life. It's a small airport. 30 minutes is a big deal for TSA there. I agreed to speak at an awesome university a 7.5 hour drive from my house. And I don't think I can get there faster in a plane right now, but it'll cost me about the same in gasoline. ...yaaay...
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Transfer single cell peptides all over the place with NO peptide loss at all!
4 people have sent me this new preprint and I've had to go "...oh...it's in my draft's folder..." but the power went out in my building while I was at a conference and it's sort of a mess and I'm grumpy, so Imma post this.
So...sometimes I see these papers where someone does something like -
1) Get better results than anyone in the world has ever gotten with that instrument (or at all)
2) And when you do that...if you don't make the data publicly available, I have to think....
Friday, March 27, 2026
The Proteomics Show is back! Check out chapter one of "All the Parts!"
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.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
How do commercial procedures impact the blood plasma proteome!
Oh. This. Is. Sick.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Non-reducing proteomics opens up a whole new pile of PTMs under stress!
I don't have my notebook on me but someone who was on The Proteomics Show dropped a knowledge bomb on us about cysteines a couple of years ago. She said something like only 12% of cysteines are involved in those disulfide bridges we're all so worried about. Might have been a he and might have been 2 or 40%.
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.
Monday, March 23, 2026
Trap column optimization for single cell or sub-nanogram proteomics!
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!
There is a paywall on this, but if you were a little sleuthy you might find an earlier version of it that isn't quite as polished that is not.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Proteomics of organoids IN OUTER SPACE!!
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 they make cells grow in little balls instead. Still...not...like normal...but if you give people a dose of a drug and measure a response and you work out that same dose for cells growing in 2 dimensions vs growing in the little balls of cells (organoids) the latter is closer to the human.
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!
To make this even more spacy! They ran the organoids on - you guessed it - an Orbitral Trap tandem Time of Flight Mass Spectrometer that we know as the Asstral!











