Separation of Ion Types in Tandem Mass Spectrometry Data Interpretation " A Graph-Theoretic Approach

  • Authors:
  • Bo Yan;Chongle Pan;Victor N. Olman;Robert L. Hettich;Ying Xu

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Georgia and Computational Biology Institute;Computational Biology Institute and University of Tennessee;University of Georgia and Computational Biology Institute;Oak Ridge National Laboratory;University of Georgia and Computational Biology Institute

  • Venue:
  • CSB '04 Proceedings of the 2004 IEEE Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference
  • Year:
  • 2004

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Abstract

Mass spectrometry is one of the most popular analytical techniques for identification of individual proteins in a protein mixture, one of the basic problems in proteomics. It identifies a protein through identifying its unique mass spectral pattern. While the problem is theoretically solvable, it remains a challenging problem computationally. One of the key challenges comes from the difficulty in distinguishing the N- and C-terminus ions, mostly b- and y-ions respectively. In this paper, we present a graph algorithm for solving the problem of separating bfrom y-ions in a set of mass spectra. We represent each spectral peak as a node and consider two types of edges: a type-1 edge connects two peaks possibly of the same ion types and a type-2 edge connects two peaks possibly of different ion types, predicted based on local information. The ion-separation problem is then formulated and solved as a graph partition problem, which is to partition the graph into three subgraphs, namely b-, y-ions and others respectively, so to maximize the total weight of type-1 edges while minimizing the total weight of type-2 edges within each subgraph. We have developed a dynamic programming algorithm for rigorously solving this graph partition problem and implemented it as a computer program PRIME. We have tested PRIME on 18 data sets of high accurate FT-ICR tandem mass spectra and found that it achieved ~90% accuracy for separation of b- and y- ions.