Genome Medicine


Commentary

Whole proteomes as internal standards in quantitative proteomics

Shao-En Ong

Author Affiliations

Proteomics and Biomarker Discovery Platform, The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, 7 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA

Genome Medicine 2010, 2:49 doi:10.1186/gm170

Published: 30 July 2010

Abstract

As mass-spectrometry-based quantitative proteomics approaches become increasingly powerful, researchers are taking advantage of well established methodologies and improving instrumentation to pioneer new protein expression profiling methods. For example, pooling several proteomes labeled using the stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) method yields a whole-proteome stable isotope-labeled internal standard that can be mixed with a tissue-derived proteome for quantification. By increasing quantitative accuracy in the analysis of tissue proteomes, such methods should improve integration of protein expression profiling data with transcriptomic data and enhance downstream bioinformatic analyses. An accurate and scalable quantitative method to analyze tumor proteomes at the depth of several thousand proteins provides a powerful tool for global protein quantification of tissue samples and promises to redefine our understanding of tumor biology.