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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Advanced Sample Preparation, Separation and Multiplexed Analysis for In-Depth Proteome Profiling of >1000 Single Cells Per Day

$5.3M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Brigham Young University
Country United States
Start Date Aug 01, 2023
End Date Jul 31, 2026
Duration 1,095 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10642310
Grant Description
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT

Cancer tissues exhibit a high degree of phenotypic heterogeneity and plasticity and contain numerous

subpopulations of cells in various states. Quantifying this heterogeneity at the single-cell level and with molecular

depth across large numbers of cells provides information that cannot be obtained at the bulk scale and will

ultimately lead to improved diagnostics and more effective treatments. While single-cell nucleic acid sequencing

approaches are having a significant impact on cancer research, proteins mediate the bulk of cellular function

and are the targets of most therapeutics. There is thus an urgent need to develop new technologies for large-

scale direct proteome profiling at the single-cell level. To fill this gap, mass spectrometry (MS)-based profiling of

protein expression in single cells has recently been demonstrated through the implementation of more efficient

sample processing workflows, novel experimental designs and improved instrument sensitivity. Label-free MS-

based proteomics can now quantify >2,000 protein groups per cell across >4 orders of magnitude of dynamic

range, but efforts to profile more than a few dozen cells per day have resulted in significantly reduced proteome

coverage. This low throughput is insufficient for the large-scale statistically powered studies required to

characterize heterogeneity in cancer cell populations. To increase measurement throughput, multiplexed

workflows based on isobaric tandem mass tags (TMTs) enable up to 18 single cells to be measured in an LC-

MS analysis, but these have still been limited to ~100 cells/day and, as generally implemented, suffer from a

large proportion of missing values and other issues affecting quantitative performance. Our overall objective is

to develop a platform that combines simplified pipette-free high-throughput sample preparation with rapid,

multicolumn liquid chromatography separations and ‘greedy’ data-dependent acquisition to profile >2000

proteins per cell with a measurement throughput of >1000 single cells per day. We hypothesize that the

advanced sample preparation and separation, combined with a far more efficient MS acquisition workflow, will

achieve in-depth SCP with a 10× throughput gain, thus providing a capability for direct, in-depth and large-scale

protein quantification that is analogous to single-cell RNA-seq. Studies in Aim 1 will focus on developing

massively parallel centrifugal nanoliter dispensing to prepare >10,000 single-cells per day at a total reagent and

consumables cost of 10,000 cells to study acquired resistance to autophagy

inhibitors in the context of autophagy-dependent triple negative breast cancer, thus establishing an innovative

platform for advancing biomedical research and individualizing therapy.
All Grantees

Brigham Young University

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