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  4. Assessing normalization methods in mass spectrometry-based proteome profiling of clinical samples
 
research article

Assessing normalization methods in mass spectrometry-based proteome profiling of clinical samples

Dubois, Etienne
•
Galindo, Antonio Nunez
•
Dayon, Loic  
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June 1, 2022
Biosystems

Background: Large-scale proteomic studies have to deal with unwanted variability, especially when samples originate from different centers and multiple analytical batches are needed. Such variability is typically added throughout all the steps of a clinical research study, from human biological sample collection and storage, sample preparation, spectral data acquisition, to peptide and protein quantification. In order to remove such diverse and unwanted variability, normalization of the protein data is performed. There have been already several published reviews comparing normalization methods in the-omics field, but reports focusing on proteomic data generated with mass spectrometry (MS) are much fewer. Additionally, most of these reports have only dealt with small datasets. Results: As a case study, here we focused on the normalization of a large MS-based proteomic dataset obtained from an overweight and obese pan-European cohort, where different normalization methods were evaluated, namely: center standardize, quantile protein, quantile sample, global standardization, ComBat, median centering, mean centering, single standard and removal of unwanted variation (RUV); some of these are generic normalization methods while others have been specifically created to deal with genomic or metabolomic data. We checked how relationships between proteins and clinical variables (e.g., gender, levels of triglycerides or cholesterol) were improved after normalizing the data with the different methods. Conclusions: Some normalization methods were better adapted for this particular large-scale shotgun proteomic dataset of human plasma samples labeled with isobaric tags and analyzed with liquid chromatography-tandem MS. In particular, quantile sample normalization, RUV, mean and median centering showed very good perfor-mances, while quantile protein normalization provided worse results than those obtained with unnormalized data.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.biosystems.2022.104661
Web of Science ID

WOS:000788743200003

Author(s)
Dubois, Etienne
Galindo, Antonio Nunez
Dayon, Loic  
Cominetti, Ornella
Date Issued

2022-06-01

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD

Published in
Biosystems
Volume

215

Article Number

104661

Subjects

Biology

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Mathematical & Computational Biology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics

•

mass spectrometry

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normalization

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obesity

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protein

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proteomics

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tandem mass tags

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quantification

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biomarker discovery

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unwanted variation

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expression data

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proteins

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robustness

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throughput

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scale

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEPA  
Available on Infoscience
May 9, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/187653
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