Comparison of matched formalin‐fixed paraffin embedded and fresh frozen meningioma tissue reveals bias in proteomic profiles
Tissue biopsies are most commonly archived in a paraffin block following tissue fixation with formaldehyde (FFPE) or as fresh frozen tissue (FFT). While both methods preserve biological samples, little is known about how they affect the quantifiable proteome. We performed a ‘bottom‐up’ proteomic ana...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proteomics (Weinheim) 2022-11, Vol.22 (21), p.e2200085-n/a |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Tissue biopsies are most commonly archived in a paraffin block following tissue fixation with formaldehyde (FFPE) or as fresh frozen tissue (FFT). While both methods preserve biological samples, little is known about how they affect the quantifiable proteome. We performed a ‘bottom‐up’ proteomic analysis (N = 20) of short and long‐term archived FFPE surgical samples of human meningiomas and compared them to matched FFT specimens. FFT facilitated a similar number of proteins assigned by MetaMorpheus compared with matched FFPE specimens (5378 vs. 5338 proteins, respectively (p = 0.053), regardless of archival time. However, marked differences in the proteome composition were apparent between FFPE and FFT specimens. Twenty‐three percent of FFPE‐derived peptides and 8% of FFT‐derived peptides contained at least one chemical modification. Methylation and formylation were most prominent in FFPE‐derived peptides (36% and 17% of modified FFPE peptides, respectively) while, most of phosphorylation and iron modifications appeared in FFT‐derived peptides (p |
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ISSN: | 1615-9853 1615-9861 |
DOI: | 10.1002/pmic.202200085 |