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Depletion of Myofibril-Associated Proteins Using Selective Protein Extraction as a Tool in Cardiac Proteomics.

Muscle tissue poses a particular challenge to proteomic analysis due to a very wide range of protein abundances arising from the dominant expression of myofilament-related proteins. We address this issue by describing proteomic analysis with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and sequential window acquisition of all theoretical mass spectra (SWATH), of guinea pig cardiac tissue prepared in two homogenization buffers: (1) An SDS-based buffer designed to extract "all" tissue proteins and (2) a long-established EDTA-containing buffer thought to preferentially extract non-myofibril-related proteins. We use gene ontology (GO) annotation-based assessment of subcellular localization to indicate if these enriched proteins congregate in the cytoplasm or in organellar lumens. This technique results in the preferential quantitation of less abundant non-myofibrillar proteins and, for future studies, offers the opportunity for more complete analyses of changes in heart tissue protein expression with biological circumstance.

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