Methods
Sample preparation: 108 FFPE colon cancer biopsies were digested with trypsin, aliquots pooled and fractionated by high pH reversed phase HPLC as described previously.3 Plasma from 30 patient samples was digested with trypsin in the presence of 1M urea, pooled and fractionated as described above. The fractions were dried down, reconstituted to 0.5 µg/µL in 2% acetonitrile/98% water/0.1% formic acid. iRT peptides were added to each fraction according to vendor instructions (Biognosys).
Chromatography: Fractions from samples were separated using a Phenomenex Luna Omega Polar C18, 3µm, 0.3x150 mm column connected directly to the OptiFlow Source. Using a trap-elute configuration on the NanoLC™ 425 System (SCIEX), a 10 minute gradient from 5-40% acetonitrile in 0.1% formic acid was used to separate the peptides as described previously.1 Column was heated to 30 ºC using the column heater integrated with the source.
Mass spectrometry: The TripleTOF 6600+ System was equipped with the OptiFlow Turbo V Source with the 1-10 µL/min probe and electrode. IDA acquisition was performed using a TOF MS survey scan (100 msec) followed by 50 MS/MS scans (20 msec) as described previously.1 Total run time for each fraction including trap loading was 15 min.
Data processing: Data files were uploaded to SCIEX Cloud Platform using CloudConnect in PeakView® Software 2.2. Data were then searched using the multi-file option in the ProteinPilot™ App in OneOmics Suite using a UniProt human FASTA file. The search effort used in the cloud app was "Thorough" and "biological modifications" was selected to ensure the broadest search space. Search results were visualized using the Analytics and Browser apps to ensure the quality of the generated ion library. The ion libraries could then be used to directly process SWATH® Acquisition data using Extractor (Figure 1).
Data processing in SCIEX Cloud Platform
LC-MS data were generated on the TripleTOF 6600+ System, then the data were immediately uploaded to the cloud using CloudConnect. Once data upload was complete, an experiment was defined within Experiment Manager to define the files to be included in the data processing. Here, a multi-file search was done in the ProteinPilot App in order to create a single large search result. This search result could then be used for processing of SWATH® Acquisition data in the proteomics pipeline (Figure 2). The full workflow is described in the SCIEX technical note and the OneOmics Suite community.3,4
Fast protein identification
In this study, the use of larger numbers of high pH fractionation with fast microflow LC-MS/MS was explored for the rapid generation of protein identification experiments and the generation of large SWATH Acquisition ion libraries. Two sample types were analyzed. Colon cancer FFPE biopsies and human plasma were digested and subjected to high pH fractionation where 40 fractions were collected for each. Then using a 10 min LC gradient, each fraction was analyzed by data dependent acquisition. After data upload, protein identification was performed using the ProteinPilot App. Time from start of data acquisition to obtaining protein identification results was under 20 hours.
For the undepleted plasma sample, the combined search of the 40 fractions identified over 1100 proteins at <1% FDR. For the 40 fractions from the colon cancer FFPE samples, over 7200 proteins were identified at <1% FDR. The search parameters for these samples are shown in Figure 3. The same searches were performed on the desktop computer provided for ProteinPilot Software searches to compare search speed (Table 1). As expected for cloud-based searches, the larger the search, the larger the speed gain by moving the search to the cloud. In addition, larger searches can be performed in parallel, further accelerating time to results.
The resulting *.group file can now be used for processing of SWATH Acquisition data using the Extractor and Assembler Apps in the OneOmics Suite, or downloaded to the desktop and opened using ProteinPIlot Software 5.3.
Conclusions
Using OneOmics Suite in SCIEX Cloud Platform, protein identification experiments, or generation of ion libraries for SWATH Acquisition data, can be rapidly generated. Here the use of a higher number of fractions from digested samples combined with fast microflow LC on the TripleTOF 6600+ System was explored. In under 24 hours, LC-MS data were acquired, uploaded to the cloud and searched using the ProteinPilot App (Figure 1). Very good protein identification results were found for both samples tested, plasma and tissue lysates (Table 1).
This approach is highly scalable, more fractions can be generated to dig deeper into complex samples, rapidly interrogated and searched in the cloud, which can more easily accommodate larger and larger studies than a desktop solution.