pr5b01001_si_002.xlsx (362.79 kB)
Download fileTau Protein Quantification in Human Cerebrospinal Fluid by Targeted Mass Spectrometry at High Sequence Coverage Provides Insights into Its Primary Structure Heterogeneity
dataset
posted on 2016-02-04, 15:41 authored by Nicolas R Barthélemy, François Fenaille, Christophe Hirtz, Nicolas Sergeant, Susanna Schraen-Maschke, Jérôme Vialaret, Luc Buée, Audrey Gabelle, Christophe Junot, Sylvain Lehmann, François BecherTau protein plays a major role in
neurodegenerative disorders,
appears to be a central biomarker of neuronal injury in cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF), and is a promising target for Alzheimer’s disease
immunotherapies. To quantify tau at high sensitivity and gain insights
into its naturally occurring structural variations in human CSF, we
coupled absolute quantification using protein standard with the multiplex
detection capability of targeted high-resolution mass spectrometry
(MS) on a Quadrupole-Orbitrap instrument. Using recombinant tau we developed a step-by-step workflow optimization
including an extraction protocol that avoided affinity reagents and
achieved the monitoring of 22 tau peptides uniformly distributed along
the tau sequence. The lower limits of quantification ranged (LLOQ)
from 150 to 1500 pg/mL depending on the peptide. Applied to endogenous
CSF tau, up to 19 peptides were detected. Interestingly, there were
significant differences in the abundance of peptides depending on
their position in the sequence, with peptides from the tau mid-domain
appearing significantly more abundant than peptides from the N- and
C-terminus domains. This MS-based strategy provided results complementary
to those of previous ELISA or Western Blot studies of CSF tau and
could be applied to tau monitoring in human CSF cohorts.