2 research outputs found
Proteomic Analysis of Adult Human Hippocampal Subfields Demonstrates Regional Heterogeneity in the Protein Expression
Background: Distinct hippocampal subfields are known
to get affected during aging, psychiatric disorders, and various neurological
and neurodegenerative conditions. To understand the biological processes
associated with each subfield, it is important to understand its heterogeneity
at the molecular level. To address this lacuna, we investigated the
proteomic analysis of hippocampal subfieldsthe cornu ammonis
sectors (CA1, CA2, CA3, CA4) and dentate gyrus (DG) from healthy adult
human cohorts. Findings: Microdissection of hippocampal
subfields from archived formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections
followed by TMT-based multiplexed proteomic analysis resulted in the
identification of 5,593 proteins. Out of these, 890 proteins were
found to be differentially abundant among the subfields. Further bioinformatics
analysis suggested proteins related to gene splicing, transportation,
myelination, structural activity, and learning processes to be differentially
abundant in DG, CA4, CA3, CA2, and CA1, respectively. A subset of
proteins was selected for immunohistochemistry-based validation in
an independent set of hippocampal samples. Conclusions: We believe that our findings will effectively pave the way for further
analysis of the hippocampal subdivisions and provide awareness of
its subfield-specific association to various neurofunctional anomalies
in the future. The current mass spectrometry data is deposited and
publicly made available through ProteomeXchange Consortium via the
PRIDE partner repository with the data set identifier PXD029697
Proteomic Analysis of Adult Human Hippocampal Subfields Demonstrates Regional Heterogeneity in the Protein Expression
Background: Distinct hippocampal subfields are known
to get affected during aging, psychiatric disorders, and various neurological
and neurodegenerative conditions. To understand the biological processes
associated with each subfield, it is important to understand its heterogeneity
at the molecular level. To address this lacuna, we investigated the
proteomic analysis of hippocampal subfieldsthe cornu ammonis
sectors (CA1, CA2, CA3, CA4) and dentate gyrus (DG) from healthy adult
human cohorts. Findings: Microdissection of hippocampal
subfields from archived formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections
followed by TMT-based multiplexed proteomic analysis resulted in the
identification of 5,593 proteins. Out of these, 890 proteins were
found to be differentially abundant among the subfields. Further bioinformatics
analysis suggested proteins related to gene splicing, transportation,
myelination, structural activity, and learning processes to be differentially
abundant in DG, CA4, CA3, CA2, and CA1, respectively. A subset of
proteins was selected for immunohistochemistry-based validation in
an independent set of hippocampal samples. Conclusions: We believe that our findings will effectively pave the way for further
analysis of the hippocampal subdivisions and provide awareness of
its subfield-specific association to various neurofunctional anomalies
in the future. The current mass spectrometry data is deposited and
publicly made available through ProteomeXchange Consortium via the
PRIDE partner repository with the data set identifier PXD029697