2 research outputs found
Glycocapture-Assisted Global Quantitative Proteomics (gagQP) Reveals Multiorgan Responses in Serum Toxicoproteome
Blood
is an ideal window for viewing our health and disease status.
Because blood circulates throughout the entire body and carries secreted,
shed, and excreted signature proteins from every organ and tissue
type, it is thus possible to use the blood proteome to achieve a comprehensive
assessment of multiple-organ physiology and pathology. To date, the
blood proteome has been frequently examined for diseases of individual
organs; studies on compound insults impacting multiple organs are,
however, elusive. We believe that a characterization of peripheral
blood for organ-specific proteins affords a powerful strategy to allow
early detection, staging, and monitoring of diseases and their treatments
at a whole-body level. In this paper we test this hypothesis by examining
a mouse model of acetaminophen (APAP)-induced hepatic and extra-hepatic
toxicity. We used a glycocapture-assisted global quantitative proteomics
(gagQP) approach to study serum proteins and validated our results
using Western blot. We discovered in mouse sera both hepatic and extra-hepatic
organ-specific proteins. From our validation, it was determined that
selected organ-specific proteins had changed their blood concentration
during the course of toxicity development and recovery. Interestingly,
the peak responding time of proteins specific to different organs
varied in a time-course study. The collected molecular information
shed light on a complex, dynamic, yet interweaving, multiorgan-enrolled
APAP toxicity. The developed technique as well as the identified protein
markers is translational to human studies. We hope our work can broaden
the utility of blood proteomics in diagnosis and research of the whole-body
response to pathogenic cues
Identification of Organ-Enriched Protein Biomarkers of Acute Liver Injury by Targeted Quantitative Proteomics of Blood in Acetaminophen- and Carbon-Tetrachloride-Treated Mouse Models and Acetaminophen Overdose Patients
Organ-enriched
blood proteins, those produced primarily in one
organ and secreted or exported to the blood, potentially afford a
powerful and specific approach to assessing diseases in their cognate
organs. We demonstrate that quantification of organ-enriched proteins
in the blood offers a new strategy to find biomarkers for diagnosis
and assessment of drug-induced liver injury (and presumably the assessment
of other liver diseases). We used selected reaction monitoring (SRM)
mass spectrometry to quantify 81 liver-enriched proteins plus three
aminotransferases (ALT1, AST1, and AST2) in plasma of C57BL/6J and
NOD/ShiLtJ mice exposed to acetaminophen or carbon tetrachloride.
Plasma concentrations of 49 liver-enriched proteins were perturbed
significantly in response to liver injury induced by one or both toxins.
We validated four of these toxin-responsive proteins (ALDOB, ASS1,
BHMT, and GLUD1) by Western blotting. By both assays, these four proteins
constitute liver injury markers superior to currently employed markers
such as ALT and AST. A similar approach was also successful in human
serum where we had analyzed 66 liver-enriched proteins in acetaminophen
overdose patients. Of these, 23 proteins were elevated in patients;
15 of 23 overlapped with the concentration-increased proteins in the
mouse study. A combination of 5 human proteins, AGXT, ALDOB, CRP,
FBP1, and MMP9, provides the best diagnostic performance to distinguish
acetaminophen overdose patients from controls (sensitivity: 0.85,
specificity: 0.84, accuracy: 85%). These five blood proteins are candidates
for detecting acetaminophen-induced liver injury using next-generation
diagnostic devices (e.g, microfluidic ELISA assays)