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A targeted, bottom-up proteomic assay was developed for the qualitative detection of apolipoprotein L1 (ApoL1) protein variants (G0, G1, and G2) in blood plasma for identification of high and low renal risk genotypes. Following trypsin digestion of liquid or dry plasma, surrogate peptides specific to each ApoL1 variant were detected by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry along with two surrogate peptides common among all variants which served as internal (positive) controls to verify correct sample processing. Using isotopically labeled peptide internal standards, the presence or absence of each surrogate peptide was determined using multiple objective metrics including: 1) retention time confirmation relative to its internal standard, 2) comparison of the internal standard-normalized response relative to pre-established thresholds for confident detection, and 3) ion ratio monitoring. Based on the pattern of variant-specific surrogate peptides detected, the genotype was accurately inferred. The final, optimized method was fully validated for liquid plasma specimens, as well as dry plasma specimens collected on a laminar flow blood separation device. For both specimen types, the latter which can be self-collected for remote or in-home sampling, the assay was shown to be reproducible, interference-free with the exception of gross hemolysis, and accurate relative to Sanger sequencing (100% agreement). This targeted, qualitative bottom-up proteomic assay for detection of ApoL1 variants in blood provides a high-throughput, cost-effective alternative to molecular methods and has potential implications to improve organ allocation by facilitating screening kidney donors for high-risk ApoL1 genotypes, but could be applicable for genotyping other clinically relevant blood proteins variants. Copyright © 2020 The Canadian Society of Clinical Chemists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

Meghan Norris Bradley, Christopher M Shuford, Patricia L Holland, Michael Levandoski, Russell P Grant. Quality over quantity: A qualitative, targeted bottom-up proteomics approach to genotyping apolipoprotein L1. Clinical biochemistry. 2020 Aug;82:58-65

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PMID: 32234366

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