Protein Sequencing and Identification Using Tandem Mass Spectrometry
N**N
MS/MS解析を学ぶ(復習する)人にお薦めです。
届いたばっかりで全体を流し読みした程度ですが、マススペクトロメトリーによるタンパク質の解析を進めていく上で良い参考書だと思います。質量分析器の原理、基礎、実際のマススペクトルが図示されており、理解を助けてくれます。洋書なのでどのような表現方法が使われているか等、論文を書く際にも役立つのではないでしょうか。また参考文献が各章毎にしっかりとピックアップされており、より深く知りたい場合の助けになります。また現在汎用されているタンパク質分離のためのゲル電気泳動の原理についても解説されています。これからタンパク質、ペプチドのマス解析を始める、また始めて間もない初心者で、かつ英語に馴れようと考えている方に特にお薦めします。
W**D
Broad, thorough introduction
I'm not a bench chemist, but I needed a quick survey of how mass spectroscopy is used in handling proteins and other big biomolecules. This book was it.Although brief, it is thorough and well-organized. The first two chapters are mostly an introduction. Chapter 1 states the problem being solved. The next chapter briefly introduces older technologies, including chemical techiques and 60s-80s mass spec technique. The next two chapters summarize modern mass spec hardware, then start to show how proteins behave in the environment inside the instrument. That gives the fundamentals of protein sequencing: how the molecules break down, and how the fragments help recreate the molecule. The authors go through a few examples in detail, starting from a mass spectrogram and moving forward to sequence. I was especially impressed by the examples that fail. Mass spec analysis is not a magic wand for producing sequences, it is a deductive process, and can not complete an analysis when clues are missing or ambiguous.The next three chapters are not about mass spec directly. Instead, they discuss how samples are prepared for analysis. This includes the clearest, most informative description of gel electrophoresis that I've seen, along with features of gel chemistry that do or do not interfere with mass spec measurements. This includes a discussion of protein digests, enzymatically produced fragments, and their place in analysis. I would have liked a little more discussion about combining information from digests produced by different enzymes, but no book can cover everything.The last three chapters extend the discussion of analysis, working upwards from fragments to complete protein sequences. The three chapters respectively address three topics: using standard internet databases for recognizing fragments of known proteins, using combinations of strategies to analyze novel proteins, and using mass spec to identify post-translational modifications. That last one suffers from brevity; perhaps it was only meant to define a problem that deserves a whole book of its own.Despite its throughness, the authors resist the urge for boggling detail. They present detail up to the point needed for understanding the mechanism and meaning of their topics, then stop. Lots of other writing would benefit from that kind of restraint.I came away from this book well-informed, and ready to address specific topics in greater detail. That was exactly what I wanted. I recommend this book very highly.//wiredweird
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