๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Database searching using mass spectrometry data

โœ Scribed by Dr. John R. Yates III


Book ID
102837015
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
863 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0173-0835

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โœฆ Synopsis


Large-scale DNA sequencing is creating a sequence infrastructure of great benefit to protein biochemistry. Concurrent with the application of large-scale DNA sequencing to whole genome analysis, mass spectrometry has attained the capability to rapidly, and with remarkable sensitivity, determine weights and amino acid sequences of peptides. Computer algorithms have been developed to use the two different types of data generated by mass spectrometers to search sequence databases. When a protein is digested with a site-specific protease, the molecular weights of the resulting collection of peptides, the mass map or fingerprint, can be determined using mass spectrometry. The molecular weights of the set of peptides derived from the digestion of a protein can then be used to identify the protein. Several different approaches have been developed. Protein identification using peptide mass mapping is an effective technique when studying organisms with completed genomes. A second method is based on the use of data created by tandem mass spectrometers. Tandem mass spectra contain highly specific information in the fragmentation pattern as well as sequence information. This information has been used to search databases of translated protein sequences as well as nucleotide databases such as expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences. The ability to search nucleotide databases is an advantage when analyzing data obtained from organisms whose genomes are not yet completed, but a large amount of expressed gene sequence is available (e.g., human and mouse). Furthermore, a strength of using tandem mass spectra to search databases is the ability to identify proteins present in fairly complex mixtures.


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An error tolerant mode for database matching of uninterpreted tandem mass spectrometry data is described. Selected database entries are searched without enzyme specificity, using a comprehensive list of chemical and post-translational modifications, together with a residue substitution matrix. The m