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Title: Mass spectrometric identification of serum peptides employing derivatized poly(glycidyl methacrylate/divinyl benzene) particles and mu-HPLC. Author: Rainer M, Najam-ul-Haq M, Bakry R, Huck CW, Bonn GK. Journal: J Proteome Res; 2007 Jan; 6(1):382-6. PubMed ID: 17203982. Abstract: Biomarkers play a key role in preclinical screening and diagnosis of a disease. Various support materials are utilized for this task, in combination with MALDI-TOF-MS. The way to effectively bind serum contents and their profiling is well-elaborated by the material-enhanced laser desorption ionization (MELDI) approach. In this particular work, focus is placed on the development of a strategy to identify low molecular weight serum peptides. Poly(GMA/DVB) is derivatized in a way to achieve an affinity termed as immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC). Iminodiacetic acid (IDA) is used as a chelating ligand, whereas copper (Cu2+) acts as a metal ion for complexing peptides and proteins out of blood serum. Polymer binds the serum compounds over a broad mass range, which includes low mass peptides and high mass albumin (66 kDa). Bound contents are eluted from material by an acetonitrile/trifluoroacetic acid mixture, which proves the reversible nature of metal and amino acid linkage. Polystyrene/divinyl benzene (PS/DVB) monolithic capillary column is used for fractionation through RP-HPLC, prior to the target spotting. The tandem TOF fragment ion mass spectra of each fraction is acquired and used to search against the Swiss-Prot database, using the Mascot search engine for the identification of peptides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]