1. BIOL 3095 September 30, 2011.
Reflection on Seminar 2: “Proteomic biomarker discovery.”
By: Angélica M. González Sánchez Student number: 804-11-3354
On the seminar given by the Ph.D. candidate, Ms. Lisandra Santiago, she discussed proteomics, the
topic of her research. This is the study of protein’s structure and function and it is particularly important in the
discovery of biomarkers for diseases. That’s why new techniques are being implemented to improve its job,
such as the characterization of phosphorylated peptides using mass spectrometry, which is shown to be the most
common, sensitive and effective one. However, mass spectrometry can’t be efficient enough on its own. That’s
why it is usually used as a part of shotgun proteomics. This is a process of obtaining, processing and identifying
proteins. It mainly consists of taking out proteins from samples (plasma or tissue), digesting the proteins into
peptides, fractionating them by liquid chromatography, processing them through mass spectrometry, comparing
the resulting proteins on data bases and determining the potential biomarkers for the disease. The problem with
this approach is that it identifies too many proteins, making the validation process longer and the specificity of the
biomarkers uncertain. That’s why some pioneering approaches for biomarker discovery have developed, such as
the combination of tissue and plasma samples and new experimental designs to detect the bioactivity of proteins.
However, we learned that the field of proteomics still needs to “evaluate the entire process right from sample
acquisition to bioinformatics analysis with the aim to implement and develop innovative strategies” (Veenstra,
2011).
From my perspective, this seminar was very enriching because it showed new concepts which are very
remarkable and relevant for actual investigations. It resulted quite valuable because it communicated several
research techniques that are currently used in the Science field.