Calibration Using a Single-Point External Reference
Material Harmonizes Quantitative Mass Spectrometry Proteomics Data
between Platforms and Laboratories
posted on 2018-10-11, 00:00authored byLindsay
K. Pino, Brian C. Searle, Eric L. Huang, William Stafford Noble, Andrew N. Hoofnagle, Michael J. MacCoss
Mass spectrometry (MS) measurements
are not inherently calibrated.
Researchers use various calibration methods to assign meaning to arbitrary
signal intensities and improve precision. Internal calibration (IC)
methods use internal standards (IS) such as synthesized or recombinant
proteins or peptides to calibrate MS measurements by comparing endogenous
analyte signal to the signal from known IS concentrations spiked into
the same sample. However, recent work suggests that using IS as IC
introduces quantitative biases that affect comparison across studies
because of the inability of IS to capture all sources of variation
present throughout an MS workflow. Here, we describe a single-point
external calibration strategy to calibrate signal intensity measurements
to a common reference material, placing MS measurements on the same
scale and harmonizing signal intensities between instruments, acquisition
methods, and sites. We demonstrate data harmonization between laboratories
and methodologies using this generalizable approach.