Human serum is one of the most attractive specimens in biomarker research. However, its overcomplicated properties have hindered the analysis of low-abundance proteins by conventional mass spectrometry techniques. This work proposes an innovative strategy for utilizing nanodiamonds (NDs) in combination with Triton X-114 protein extraction to fractionate the crude serum to six pH-tuned fractions, simplifying the overall proteome and facilitate protein profiling with high efficiency. A total of 663 pro-teins are identified and evenly distributed among the fractions along with 39 FDA-approved biomarkers – a remarkable increase from the 230 proteins found in unfractioned crude serum. In the low-abundance proteins section, 88 proteins with 7 FDA-approved biomarkers are detected – a marked increase from the 15 proteins observed in the untreated sample. Notably, fractions at pH11, derived from the aqueous phase of detergent separation, suggest potential applications in rapid and robust protein analysis. Notably, by outlining the excellent properties of the NDs for proteomic research, this work suggests a promising extraction protocol utilizing the great compatibility of NDs with streamlined serum proteomics, and identifies potential avenues for future developments. Finally, we believe that this proposed method to improve shotgun proteomics may be of interest to a specialized proteomics community.