Sample preparation for proteomics applications: Serum and
bacterial proteome Biotechnology
### Sample Preparation for Serum and Bacterial Proteomes
Sample preparation strategies vary significantly depending on the biological source. Serum and bacterial proteomes present distinct challenges: serum is dominated by high-abundance proteins with a wide dynamic range, while bacteria require efficient cell wall disruption and stabilization against rapid proteolysis.
**Serum Proteome Preparation**
Serum contains albumin, immunoglobulins, and other high-abundance proteins that mask low-abundance biomarkers. The key steps include:
1. **Depletion:** Immunoaffinity columns remove top 6–14 abundant proteins (e.g., albumin, IgG), enriching low-abundance species by 10–100 fold. Alternatively, nanoparticle-based or dye-based methods (ProteoMiner) offer unbiased equalization.
2. **Denaturation and Reduction:** Urea or RIPA buffer with DTT and protease inhibitors is added, followed by alkylation with iodoacetamide.
3. **Digestion and Cleanup:** Trypsin digestion (overnight, 37°C) generates peptides. C18 spin columns or S-Trap remove salts and detergents before LC-MS/MS.
**Bacterial Proteome Preparation**
Bacteria possess a tough cell wall (peptidoglycan in Gram-positive; outer membrane in Gram-negative). Effective lysis is crucial:
1. **Mechanical Lysis:** Bead beating with zirconia/silica beads (0.1–0.5 mm) in a lysis buffer containing 4% SDS or 8 M urea, plus protease inhibitors. This disrupts cell walls efficiently without protein degradation.
2. **Chemical Lysis:** Lysozyme (for Gram-positive) or EDTA + lysozyme (for Gram-negative) weakens the wall prior to detergent lysis.
3. **Protein Extraction and Cleanup:** After centrifugation, proteins are reduced/alkylated. For MS, SDS is removed via acetone precipitation, filter-aided sample preparation (FASP), or SP3 (single-pot solid-phase-enhanced sample preparation).
**Key Differences:** Serum requires depletion of abundant host proteins; bacteria require aggressive mechanical lysis. Serum often uses immunodepletion; bacteria use bead milling or lysozyme. Both demand strict protease inhibition, but bacterial samples degrade faster due to endogenous proteases released upon lysis.
Proper adaptation of these protocols ensures high proteome coverage and reproducibility across both sample types.