Journal of Clinical Virology Plus (Jun 2023)

Proteome2virus: Shotgun mass spectrometry data analysis pipeline for virus identification

  • Manon Balvers,
  • Isabelle F. Gordijn,
  • Ingrid A.I. Voskamp-Visser,
  • Merel F.A. Schelling,
  • Rob Schuurman,
  • Esther Heikens,
  • Rene Braakman,
  • Christoph Stingl,
  • Hans C. van Leeuwen,
  • Theo M. Luider,
  • Lennard J. Dekker,
  • Evgeni Levin,
  • Armand Paauw

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. 100147

Abstract

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Objectives: Shotgun proteomics is a generic method enabling detection of multiple viral species in one assay. The reliable and accurate identification of these viral species by analyzing peptides from MS-spectra is a challenging task. The aim of this study was to develop an easy accessible proteome analysis approach for the identification of viruses that cause respiratory and gastrointestinal infections. Methods: For this purpose, a shotgun proteomics based method and a web application, ‘proteome2virus’, were developed. Identified peptides were searched in a database comprising proteomic data of 46 viruses known to be infectious to humans. Results: The method was successfully tested for cultured viruses and eight fecal samples consisting of ten different viral species from seven different virus families, including SARS-CoV-2. The samples were prepared with two different sample preparation methods and were measured with two different mass spectrometers. Conclusions: The results demonstrate that the developed web application is applicable to different MS data sets, generated from two different instruments, and that with this approach a high variety of clinically relevant viral species can be identified. This emphasizes the potential and feasibility for the diagnosis of a wide range of viruses in clinical samples with a single shotgun proteomics analysis.

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