Authors
Marcus Bantscheff, Markus Schirle, Gavain Sweetman, Jens Rick, Bernhard Kuster
Publication date
2007/10
Source
Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry
Volume
389
Pages
1017-1031
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Description
The quantification of differences between two or more physiological states of a biological system is among the most important but also most challenging technical tasks in proteomics. In addition to the classical methods of differential protein gel or blot staining by dyes and fluorophores, mass-spectrometry-based quantification methods have gained increasing popularity over the past five years. Most of these methods employ differential stable isotope labeling to create a specific mass tag that can be recognized by a mass spectrometer and at the same time provide the basis for quantification. These mass tags can be introduced into proteins or peptides (i) metabolically, (ii) by chemical means, (iii) enzymatically, or (iv) provided by spiked synthetic peptide standards. In contrast, label-free quantification approaches aim to correlate the mass spectrometric signal of intact proteolytic peptides or the number of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Bantscheff, M Schirle, G Sweetman, J Rick, B Kuster - Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry, 2007