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Bioinformatics ; 23(2): e198-204, 2007 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17237092

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: There is a pressing need for improved proteomic screening methods allowing for earlier diagnosis of disease, systematic monitoring of physiological responses and the uncovering of fundamental mechanisms of drug action. The combined platform of LC-MS (Liquid-Chromatography-Mass-Spectrometry) has shown promise in moving toward a solution in these areas. In this paper we present a technique for discovering differences in protein signal between two classes of samples of LC-MS serum proteomic data without use of tandem mass spectrometry, gels or labeling. This method works on data from a lower-precision MS instrument, the type routinely used by and available to the community at large today. We test our technique on a controlled (spike-in) but realistic (serum biomarker discovery) experiment which is therefore verifiable. We also develop a new method for helping to assess the difficulty of a given spike-in problem. Lastly, we show that the problem of class prediction, sometimes mistaken as a solution to biomarker discovery, is actually a much simpler problem. RESULTS: Using precision-recall curves with experimentally extracted ground truth, we show that (1) our technique has good performance using seven replicates from each class, (2) performance degrades with decreasing number of replicates, (3) the signal that we are teasing out is not trivially available (i.e. the differences are not so large that the task is easy). Lastly, we easily obtain perfect classification results for data in which the problem of extracting differences does not produce absolutely perfect results. This emphasizes the different nature of the two problems and also their relative difficulties. AVAILABILITY: Our data are publicly available as a benchmark for further studies of this nature at http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~jenn/LCMS


Subject(s)
Biomarkers/analysis , Biomarkers/chemistry , Blood Proteins/analysis , Blood Proteins/chemistry , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Sequence Analysis, Protein/methods , Algorithms , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
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