Mascot: The trusted reference standard for protein identification by mass spectrometry for 25 years

Blog

Articles tagged: mass tolerant

Return to blog archive

Posted by John Cottrell (January 12, 2018)

Results round-up for the ‘dark matter’ challenge

In June, we tried to harness the power of crowd-sourcing to explain some of the unidentified modifications found in open database searches. We selected 20 abundant and unassigned mass deltas from Supplementary Table 3 of the recent MSFragger paper from Alexey Nesvizhskii’s group at U. Michigan and offered prizes for the first credible explanations. There were 35 unannotated deltas in [...]

Full article and comments form

Posted by John Cottrell (June 26, 2017)

Trying to illuminate proteomics ‘dark matter’

The May 2017 issue of Nature Methods has a paper from Alexey Nesvizhskii’s group at U. Michigan describing a new open database search program called MSFragger. Strikingly, they also observed the two highly abundant but unidentified mass deltas reported in Steven Gygi’s 2015 mass tolerant paper: 301.9864 and 249.9803. The challenges of open searching were discussed in an earlier blog [...]

Full article and comments form

Posted by John Cottrell (September 22, 2015)

Mass-tolerant vs Error tolerant

"A mass-tolerant database search identifies a large proportion of unassigned spectra in shotgun proteomics as modified peptides" in Nature Biotechnology is from Steven Gygi’s lab at Harvard Medical School. It describes the use of a very wide precursor mass tolerance, +/- 500 Da, to identify modified peptides in a Sequest search. How does this approach, which the authors call an [...]

Full article and comments form