Publication | Open Access
Statistical Analysis of Variation in the Human Plasma Proteome
37
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
EngineeringHealthy SubjectsPathologyBiomarker (Medicine)BioanalysisPlasma ProteomicsBiostatisticsBiomarker DiscoveryClinical ChemistryProteomicsOmicsHuman Plasma ProteomeBioinformaticsPhysiologyMass SpectrometryComputational BiologyBiomarkersHuman PlasmaSystems BiologyMedicine
Quantifying the variation in the human plasma proteome is an essential prerequisite for disease-specific biomarker detection. We report here on the longitudinal and individual variation in human plasma characterized by two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE) using plasma samples from eleven healthy subjects collected three times over a two week period. Fixed-effects modeling was used to remove dye and gel variability. Mixed-effects modeling was then used to quantitate the sources of proteomic variation. The subject-to-subject variation represented the largest variance component, while the time-within-subject variation was comparable to the experimental variation found in a previous technical variability study where one human plasma sample was processed eight times in parallel and each was then analyzed by 2-D DIGE in triplicate. Here, 21 protein spots had larger than 50% CV, suggesting that these proteins may not be appropriate as biomarkers and should be carefully scrutinized in future studies. Seventy-eight protein spots showing differential protein levels between different individuals or individual collections were identified by mass spectrometry and further characterized using hierarchical clustering. The results present a first step toward understanding the complexity of longitudinal and individual variation in the human plasma proteome, and provide a baseline for improved biomarker discovery.
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