“…1,7,14,21 Also, the detergent must be removed prior to analysis because it can affect chromatographic separation and suppress ionization in the MS. 5,10,12,20,26,27 The acid-labile surfactant RapiGest SF (Waters) has been shown to greatly enhance membrane protein solubility 3 and allow 100% enzyme digestion at surfactant concentrations of 0.1% and can be easily removed prior to MS analysis via acidification. 29 The acid-insoluble detergent sodium deoxycholate (SDC) has also been reported to improve protein solubility and retain trypsin digestion efficiency at extremely high concentrations 9,10,21,30 (with 10% SDC, trypsin retained 77.4% activity), 31 and SDC can be removed prior to MS analysis via acidification or by ethyl acetate phase transfer. 4,30,32 Many other common surfactants, such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), can be utilized; however, most require thorough removal via dialysis or chromatography techniques, which can be problematic for high-throughput analyses and low abundance proteins.…”