18 research outputs found
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Plasma kininogen and kininogen fragments are biomarkers of progressive renal decline in type-1 diabetes
The ability of microalbuminuria to predict early progressive renal function decline in type-1 diabetic patients has been questioned. To resolve this, we determined the plasma proteome differences between microalbuminuric patients with type-1 diabetes and stable renal function (controls) and patients at risk for early progressive renal function decline (cases) and asked whether these differences have value as surrogate biomarkers. Mass spectrometry was used to analyze small (less than 3 kDa) plasma peptides isolated from well-matched case and control plasma obtained at the beginning of an 8-12 year follow-up period. Spearman analysis of plasma peptide abundance and the rate of renal function decline during follow-up identified seven masses with a significant negative correlation with early progressive renal function decline. Tandem mass spectrometry identified three fragments of high molecular weight kininogen. Increased plasma high molecular weight kininogen in the cases was confirmed by immunoblot. One peptide, des-Arg9-BK(1-8), induced Erk1/2 phosphorylation when added apically to two proximal tubular cell lines grown on permeable inserts. Thus, we have identified plasma protein fragments, some of which have biological activity with moderate to strong correlation, with early progressive renal function decline in microalbuminuric patients with type-1 diabetes. Other peptides are candidates for validation as candidate biomarkers of diabetes-associated renal dysfunction
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Influence of Acute High Glucose on Protein Abundance Changes in Murine Glomerular Mesangial Cells
The effects of acute exposure to high glucose levels as experienced by glomerular mesangial cells in postprandial conditions and states such as in prediabetes were investigated using proteomic methods. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry methods were used to identify protein expression patterns in immortalized rat mesangial cells altered by 2 h high glucose (HG) growth conditions as compared to isoosmotic/normal glucose control (NGā) conditions. Unique protein expression changes at 2 h HG treatment were measured for 51 protein spots. These proteins could be broadly grouped into two categories: (1) proteins involved in cell survival/cell signaling and (2) proteins involved in stress response. Immunoblot experiments for a protein belonging to both categories, prohibitin (PHB), supported a trend for increased total expression as well as significant increases in an acidic PHB isoform. Additional studies confirmed the regulation of proteasomal subunit alpha-type 2 and the endoplasmic reticulum chaperone and oxidoreductase PDI (protein disulfide isomerase), suggesting altered ER protein folding capacity and proteasomal function in response to acute HG. We conclude that short term high glucose induces subtle changes in protein abundances suggesting posttranslational modifications and regulation of pathways involved in proteostasis
The Alphaviral Capsid Protein Inhibits IRAK1-Dependent TLR Signaling
Alphaviruses are arthropod-borne RNA viruses which can cause either mild to severe febrile arthritis which may persist for months, or encephalitis which can lead to death or lifelong cognitive impairments. The non-assembly molecular role(s), functions, and proteināprotein interactions of the alphavirus capsid proteins have been largely overlooked. Here we detail the use of a BioID2 biotin ligase system to identify the proteināprotein interactions of the Sindbis virus capsid protein. These efforts led to the discovery of a series of novel hostāpathogen interactions, including the identification of an interaction between the alphaviral capsid protein and the host IRAK1 protein. Importantly, this capsidāIRAK1 interaction is conserved across multiple alphavirus species, including arthritogenic alphaviruses SINV, Ross River virus, and Chikungunya virus; and encephalitic alphaviruses Eastern Equine Encephalitis virus, and Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis virus. The impact of the capsidāIRAK1 interaction was evaluated using a robust set of cellular model systems, leading to the realization that the alphaviral capsid protein specifically inhibits IRAK1-dependent signaling. This inhibition represents a means by which alphaviruses may evade innate immune detection and activation prior to viral gene expression. Altogether, these data identify novel capsid proteināprotein interactions, establish the capsidāIRAK1 interaction as a common alphavirus hostāpathogen interface, and delineate the molecular consequences of the capsidāIRAK1 interaction on IRAK1-dependent signaling
The Alphaviral Capsid Protein Inhibits IRAK1-Dependent TLR Signaling
Alphaviruses are arthropod-borne RNA viruses which can cause either mild to severe febrile arthritis which may persist for months, or encephalitis which can lead to death or lifelong cognitive impairments. The non-assembly molecular role(s), functions, and proteināprotein interactions of the alphavirus capsid proteins have been largely overlooked. Here we detail the use of a BioID2 biotin ligase system to identify the proteināprotein interactions of the Sindbis virus capsid protein. These efforts led to the discovery of a series of novel hostāpathogen interactions, including the identification of an interaction between the alphaviral capsid protein and the host IRAK1 protein. Importantly, this capsidāIRAK1 interaction is conserved across multiple alphavirus species, including arthritogenic alphaviruses SINV, Ross River virus, and Chikungunya virus; and encephalitic alphaviruses Eastern Equine Encephalitis virus, and Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis virus. The impact of the capsidāIRAK1 interaction was evaluated using a robust set of cellular model systems, leading to the realization that the alphaviral capsid protein specifically inhibits IRAK1-dependent signaling. This inhibition represents a means by which alphaviruses may evade innate immune detection and activation prior to viral gene expression. Altogether, these data identify novel capsid proteināprotein interactions, establish the capsidāIRAK1 interaction as a common alphavirus hostāpathogen interface, and delineate the molecular consequences of the capsidāIRAK1 interaction on IRAK1-dependent signaling
Negligible evidence that people desire partners who uniquely fit their ideals
Laypersons and scholars often presume that people positively evaluate partners who match their ideal partner preferences: If Faye prefers kindness in a partner and Sonia prefers ambition, Faye should be especially attracted to kind partners and Sonia should be especially attracted to ambitious ones. However, to date, most published tests of this idea are imprecise and permit multiple interpretations of the data. The current studies improve upon prior tests by (a) having participants self-generate the ideal attributes that matter most to them and (b) using a yoked design to isolate the predictive power of self-generated (vs. other-generated) ideal attributes. Overall, participants were more romantically interested in blind-date partners (Study 1) and acquaintances/friends/romantic partners (Study 2) to the extent that they thought those individuals possessed the ideal attributes. But the positive association of these attributes with romantic interest was identical regardless of whether the attributes represented the participant's self-generated ideals or someone else's ideals. We also used a novel coding scheme to organize participants' 1011 self-generated ideal attributes into 95 different attribute-categories; we then implemented three exclusion strategies (that differed in breadth vs. precision) using this scheme in order to maximize idiosyncratic variability between self-and other-generated ideals. All approaches revealed identical conclusions. Focused tests of ideal partner preference-matching may reveal that individual differences in ideal partner preferences poorly correspond to the attributes that uniquely inspire romantic interest
Proteomic analysis of arylamine N-acetyltransferase 1 knockout breast cancer cells: Implications in immune evasion and mitochondrial biogenesis
Previous studies have shown that inhibition or depletion of N-acetyltransferase 1 (NAT1) in breast cancer cell lines leads to growth retardation both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that NAT1 contributes to rapid growth of breast cancer cells. To understand molecular and cellular processes that NAT1 contributes to and generate novel hypotheses in regard to NAT1ā²s role in breast cancer, we performed an unbiased analysis of proteomes of parental MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells and two separate NAT1 knockout (KO) cell lines. Among 4890 proteins identified, 737 proteins were found significantly (pĀ <Ā 0.01) upregulated, and 651 proteins were significantly (pĀ <Ā 0.01) downregulated in both NAT1 KO cell lines. We performed enrichment analyses to identify Gene Ontology biological processes, molecular functions, and cellular components that were enriched in each data set. Among the proteins upregulated in NAT1 KO cells, pathways associated with MHC (major histocompatibility complex) I-mediated antigen presentation were significantly enriched. This raises an interesting and new hypothesis that upregulation of NAT1 in breast cancer cells may aid them evade immune detection. Multiple pathways involved in mitochondrial functions were collectively downregulated in NAT1 KO cells, including multiple subunits of mitochondrial ATP synthase (Complex V of the electron transport chain). This was accompanied by a reduction in cell cycle-associated proteins and an increase in pro-apoptotic pathways in NAT1 KO cells, consistent with reported observations that NAT1 KO cells exhibit a slower growth rate both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, mitochondrial dysfunction in NAT1 KO cells likely contributes to growth retardation
Proteomic analysis of renal calculi indicates an important role for inflammatory processes in calcium stone formation
Even though renal stones/calculi occur in ā¼10% of individuals, they are an enormous economic burden to the entire US health system. While the relative metabolic composition of renal calculi is generally known, there is no clear understanding of the genetics of renal stone formation, nor are there clear prognostic indicators of renal stone formation. The application of proteomics to the analysis of renal calculi axiomatically holds that insight into renal stone pathobiology can be gained by a more comprehensive understanding of renal calculus protein composition. We analyzed isolated renal stone matrix proteins with mass spectrometric and immunohistochemical methods identifying 158 proteins with high confidence, including 28 common proteins. The abundant proteins included those identified previously in stones and proteins identified here for the first time, such as myeloid lineage-specific, integral membrane and lipid regulatory proteins. Pathway analyses of all proteins identified suggested that a significant fraction of the most abundant matrix proteins participate in inflammatory processes. These proteomic results support the hypothesis that stone formation induces a cellular inflammatory response and the protein components of this response contribute to the abundant stone matrix proteome
The plasma degradome reflects later development of NASH fibrosis after liver transplant
Abstract Although liver transplantation (LT) is an effective therapy for cirrhosis, the risk of post-LT NASH is alarmingly high and is associated with accelerated progression to fibrosis/cirrhosis, cardiovascular disease and decreased survival. Lack of risk stratification strategies hampers early intervention against development of post-LT NASH fibrosis. The liver undergoes significant remodeling during inflammatory injury. During such remodeling, degraded peptide fragments (i.e., ādegradomeā) of the ECM and other proteins increase in plasma, making it a useful diagnostic/prognostic tool in chronic liver disease. To investigate whether liver injury caused by post-LT NASH would yield a unique degradome profile that is predictive of severe post-LT NASH fibrosis, a retrospective analysis of 22 biobanked samples from the Starzl Transplantation Institute (12 with post-LT NASH after 5Ā years and 10 without) was performed. Total plasma peptides were isolated and analyzed by 1D-LCāMS/MS analysis using a Proxeon EASY-nLC 1000 UHPLC and nanoelectrospray ionization into an Orbitrap Elite mass spectrometer. Qualitative and quantitative peptide features data were developed from MSn datasets using PEAKS Studio X (v10). LCāMS/MS yieldedā~ā2700 identifiable peptide features based on the results from Peaks Studio analysis. Several peptides were significantly altered in patients that later developed fibrosis and heatmap analysis of the top 25 most significantly changed peptides, most of which were ECM-derived, clustered the 2 patient groups well. Supervised modeling of the dataset indicated that a fraction of the total peptide signal (~ā15%) could explain the differences between the groups, indicating a strong potential for representative biomarker selection. A similar degradome profile was observed when the plasma degradome patterns were compared being obesity sensitive (C57Bl6/J) and insensitive (AJ) mouse strains. The plasma degradome profile of post-LT patients yielded stark difference based on later development of post-LT NASH fibrosis. This approach could yield new āfingerprintsā that can serve as minimally-invasive biomarkers of negative outcomes post-LT
Patients with Proliferative Lupus Nephritis Have Autoantibodies That React to Moesin and Demonstrate Increased Glomerular Moesin Expression
Kidney involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)ātermed lupus nephritis (LN)āis a severe manifestation of SLE that can lead to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). LN is characterized by immune complex deposition and inflammation in the glomerulus. We tested the hypothesis that autoantibodies targeting podocyte and glomerular cell proteins contribute to the development of immune complex formation in LN. We used Western blotting with SLE sera from patients with and without LN to identify target antigens in human glomerular and cultured human-derived podocyte membrane proteins. Using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), we identified the proteins in the gel regions corresponding to reactive bands observed with sera from LN patients. We identified 102 proteins that were present in both the podocyte and glomerular samples. We identified 10 high-probability candidates, including moesin, using bioinformatic analysis. Confirmation of moesin as a target antigen was conducted using immunohistochemical analysis (IHC) of kidney biopsy tissue and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect circulating antibodies. By IHC, biopsies from patients with proliferative lupus nephritis (PLN, class III/IV) demonstrated significantly increased glomerular expression of moesin (p < 0.01). By ELISA, patients with proliferative LN demonstrated significantly increased antibodies against moesin (p < 0.01). This suggests that moesin is a target glomerular antigen in lupus nephritis