Qu research team develops a groundbreaking proteomic technique, Micro-scaffold Assisted Spatial Proteomic (MASP), allowing first ever simultaneous whole-tissue protein mapping with excellent accuracy

By Rebecca Brierley and Samantha Rzeszut

Published January 17, 2023

University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (UB SPPS) research teams led by Jun Qu, PhD, professor, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, were recently recognized by Nature Communications, an open access journal affiliated with Nature, the premier international science and technology journal, for their groundbreaking techniques for in-depth mapping of protein localizations in whole tissue.

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“We believe that understanding the spatial distribution of biotherapeutics on a whole tissue level will afford critical information for directing pharmaceutical efforts in evaluating and designing more effective and safer biotherapeutics. ”
Jun Qu, PhD, professor
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences

Tissues are where most biological functions, drug effects and diseases occur, and are often considered a homogenous entity where different types of cells are woven in regularly repeated patterns. However, a tissue is more like a city, with highly diversified, dynamic features across different regions. When trying to understand a city, you do not study it as a singularity; instead, you investigate its activities and functions at different locations. Because of the complex interactions within tissues, it is critically important to investigate the location-specific biological activities across all tissue regions. Increasing evidence suggests that the information on spatially resolved biological regulations, which are missed in the majority of current investigations, holds the key to addressing intractable diseases and to discovering and developing novel drugs.

Micro-scaffold Assisted Spatial Proteomic (MASP): Never before achieved simultaneously mapping of numerous proteins across a whole tissue slice in a single experiment

Spatially resolved analysis on a proteome level is highly valuable in pharmaceutical and clinical investigations but is challenging. Over the past three years, Qu and co-first authors and research scientists in Qu’s lab, Min Ma, doctoral student, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Shihan Huo, postdoctoral associate, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Ming Zhang, research scientist, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Shuo Qian, doctoral student, Roswell Park Cancer Institute and other colleagues, developed a ground-breaking technique, Micro-scaffold Assisted Spatial Proteomic (MASP). For the first time, this technique has enabled the mapping of thousands of proteins on a whole tissue with excellent accuracy and precision. One of the key innovations is a revolutionary micro-scaffold tissue compartmentalization device fabricated using state-of-the-art 3D printing techniques. This method is capable of simultaneously mapping numerous proteins across a whole tissue slice in a single experiment, which has never been achieved before. The teamed showed an application of the MASP pipeline by mapping over five thousand proteins with high accuracy in a healthy mouse brain. It included many important brain markers, regulators and transporters, where most of the proteins were for the first time mapped on the whole-tissue level.

For the first time, this technique has enabled the mapping of thousands of proteins on a whole tissue with excellent accuracy and precision.

“The uneven distribution of biotherapeutics in tissues is frequently responsible for compromised efficacy and undesirable side effects in clinical settings,” says Qu. “We believe that understanding the spatial distribution of biotherapeutics on a whole tissue level will afford critical information for directing pharmaceutical efforts in evaluating and designing more effective and safer biotherapeutics. MASP has made this happen by allowing a simultaneous study of the intra-brain distribution of the protein drug but also the spatially related biomarkers.”

Allows for unique protein mapping in various signaling networks and other functional pathways

One unique advantage of MASP is that it allows mapping of many important proteins in various signaling networks. For example, MASP generated whole-tissue distribution maps for proteins involved in the signaling pathway of an intractable neurodegenerative disease, Alzheimer’s disease. For most proteins in the pathway, this was the first time their cerebral protein distributions have been observed. The research also showed the first-ever mapping of key players in other disease and function pathways.

“Compared to previous methods for studying protein spatial distribution, such as immunoassays, MASP faithfully preserves the spatial information based on a robust compartmentalization of the tissue, which does not introduce any artifacts related to the labeling process,” says Ma and Huo. “More importantly, MASP accurately quantifies each protein at each location on the tissue, which is not affected by the limited dynamic range observed in immunoassays.”

Currently, the second generation of MASP, with higher resolution and higher throughput, is being developed in Qu’s lab. The team anticipates a wide range of applications for this novel strategy, such as understanding the efficacy/safety issues of drugs and investigation of the onset and development of diseases. 

For over 135 years, the University at Buffalo School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences has continually been a leader in the education of pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists, renowned for innovation in clinical practice and research. The school is accredited by the American Council of Pharmaceutical Education and is the No. 1 ranked school of pharmacy in New York State and No. 14 in the United States by U.S. News & World Report.