학술논문

Misidentification of transthyretin and immunoglobulin variants by proteomics due to methyl lysine formation in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded amyloid tissue.
Document Type
Article
Source
Amyloid. 2017, Vol. 24 Issue 4, p233-237. 9p.
Subject
*TRANSTHYRETIN
*GENETIC counseling
*PROTEOMICS
*IMMUNOGLOBULINS
*IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY
LYSINE synthesis
Language
ISSN
1350-6129
Abstract
Proteomics is becoming thede factogold standard for identifying amyloid proteins and is now used routinely in a number of centres. The technique is compound class independent and offers the added ability to identify variant and modified proteins. We re-examined proteomics results from a number of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded amyloid samples, which were positive for transthyretin (TTR) by immunohistochemistry and proteomics, using the UniProt human protein database modified to include TTR variants. The amyloidogenic variant, V122I TTR, was incorrectly identified in 26/27 wild-type and non-V122I variant samples due to its close mass spectral similarity with the methyl lysine-modified WT peptide [126KMe]105–127 (p.[146 KMe]125–147) generated during formalin fixation. Similarly, the methyl lysine peptide, [50KMe]43–59, from immunoglobulin lambda light chain constant region was also misidentified as arising from a rare myeloma-derived lambda variant V49I. These processing-derived modifications are not present in fresh cardiac tissue, non-fixed fat nor serum and do not materially affect the identification of amyloid proteins. They could result in the incorrect assignment of a variant, and this may have consequences for the immediate family who will require genetic counselling and potentially early clinical intervention. As proteomics becomes a routine clinical test for amyloidosis, it becomes important to be aware of potentially confounding issues such as formalin-mediated lysine methylation, and how these may influence diagnosis and possibly treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]