Automated sample preparation with SP 3 for low‐input clinical proteomics

T Müller, M Kalxdorf, R Longuespée… - Molecular systems …, 2020 - embopress.org
Molecular systems biology, 2020embopress.org
High‐throughput and streamlined workflows are essential in clinical proteomics for
standardized processing of samples from a variety of sources, including fresh‐frozen tissue,
FFPE tissue, or blood. To reach this goal, we have implemented single‐pot solid‐phase‐
enhanced sample preparation (SP 3) on a liquid handling robot for automated processing
(auto SP 3) of tissue lysates in a 96‐well format. Auto SP 3 performs unbiased protein
purification and digestion, and delivers peptides that can be directly analyzed by LCMS …
Abstract
High‐throughput and streamlined workflows are essential in clinical proteomics for standardized processing of samples from a variety of sources, including fresh‐frozen tissue, FFPE tissue, or blood. To reach this goal, we have implemented single‐pot solid‐phase‐enhanced sample preparation (SP3) on a liquid handling robot for automated processing (autoSP3) of tissue lysates in a 96‐well format. AutoSP3 performs unbiased protein purification and digestion, and delivers peptides that can be directly analyzed by LCMS, thereby significantly reducing hands‐on time, reducing variability in protein quantification, and improving longitudinal reproducibility. We demonstrate the distinguishing ability of autoSP3 to process low‐input samples, reproducibly quantifying 500–1,000 proteins from 100 to 1,000 cells. Furthermore, we applied this approach to a cohort of clinical FFPE pulmonary adenocarcinoma (ADC) samples and recapitulated their separation into known histological growth patterns. Finally, we integrated autoSP3 with AFA ultrasonication for the automated end‐to‐end sample preparation and LCMS analysis of 96 intact tissue samples. Collectively, this constitutes a generic, scalable, and cost‐effective workflow with minimal manual intervention, enabling reproducible tissue proteomics in a broad range of clinical and non‐clinical applications.
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