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Spectral Clustering Improves Label-Free Quantification of Low-Abundant Proteins

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Label-free quantification has become a common-practice in many mass spectrometry-based proteomics experiments. In recent years, we and others have shown that spectral clustering can considerably improve the analysis of (primarily… Click to show full abstract

Label-free quantification has become a common-practice in many mass spectrometry-based proteomics experiments. In recent years, we and others have shown that spectral clustering can considerably improve the analysis of (primarily large-scale) proteomics data sets. Here we show that spectral clustering can be used to infer additional peptide-spectrum matches and improve the quality of label-free quantitative proteomics data in data sets also containing only tens of MS runs. We analyzed four well-known public benchmark data sets that represent different experimental settings using spectral counting and peak intensity based label-free quantification. In both approaches, the additionally inferred peptide-spectrum matches through our spectra-cluster algorithm improved the detectability of low abundant proteins while increasing the accuracy of the derived quantitative data, without increasing the data sets’ noise. Additionally, we developed a Proteome Discoverer node for our spectra-cluster algorithm which allows anyone to rebuild our proposed pipeline using the free version of Proteome Discoverer.

Keywords: data sets; spectral clustering; low abundant; free quantification; label free

Journal Title: Journal of Proteome Research
Year Published: 2019

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