27 research outputs found
Targeted Proteomics of Human Metapneumovirus in Clinical Samples and Viral Cultures
The
rapid, sensitive, and specific identification of infectious
pathogens from clinical isolates is a critical need in the hospital
setting. Mass spectrometry (MS) has been widely adopted for identification
of bacterial pathogens, although polymerase chain reaction remains
the mainstay for the identification of viral pathogens. Here, we explored
the capability of MS for the detection of human metapneumovirus (HMPV),
a common cause of respiratory tract infections in children. Liquid
chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) sequencing
of a single HMPV reference strain (CAN97-83) was used to develop a
multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) assay that employed stable isotope-labeled
peptide internal standards for quantitation of HMPV. Using this assay,
we confirmed the presence of HMPV in viral cultures from 10 infected
patients and further assigned genetic lineage based on the presence/absence
of variant peptides belonging to the viral matrix and nucleoproteins.
Similar results were achieved for primary clinical samples (nasopharyngeal
aspirates) from the same individuals. As validation, virus lineages,
and variant coding sequences, were confirmed by next-generation sequencing
of viral RNA obtained from the culture samples. Finally, separate
dilution series of HMPV A and B lineages were used to further refine
and assess the robustness of the assay and to determine limits of
detection in nasopharyngeal aspirates. Our results demonstrate the
applicability of MRM for identification of HMPV, and assignment of
genetic lineage, from both viral cultures and clinical samples. More
generally, this approach should prove tractable as an alternative
to nucleic-acid based sequencing for the multiplexed identification
of respiratory virus infections
Longitudinal Study of Differential Protein Expression in an Alzheimer’s Mouse Model Lacking Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase
Alzheimer’s
disease (AD) is a complex neurodegenerative
process that involves altered brain immune, neuronal and metabolic
functions. Understanding the underlying mechanisms has relied on mouse
models that mimic components of AD pathology. We used gel-free, label-free
LC–MS/MS to quantify protein and phosphopeptide levels in brains
of APPSwDI/NOS2–/– (CVN–AD) mice. CVN–AD
mice show a full spectrum of AD-like pathology, including amyloid
deposition, hyperphosphorylated and aggregated tau, and neuronal loss
that worsens with age. Tryptic digests, with or without phosphopeptide
enrichment on an automated titanium dioxide LC system, were separated
by online two-dimensional LC and analyzed on a Waters Synapt G2 HDMS,
yielding relative expression for >950 proteins and >1100 phosphopeptides.
Among differentially expressed proteins were known markers found in
humans with AD, including GFAP and C1Q. Phosphorylation of connexin
43, not previously described in AD, was increased at 42 weeks, consistent
with dysregulation of gap junctions and activation of astrocytes.
Additional alterations in phosphoproteins suggests dysregulation of
mitochondria, synaptic transmission, vesicle trafficking, and innate
immune pathways. These data validate the CVN–AD mouse model
of AD, identify novel disease and age-related changes in the brain
during disease progression, and demonstrate the utility of integrating
unbiased and phosphoproteomics for understanding disease processes
in AD
Analysis of Oxygen/Glucose-Deprivation-Induced Changes in SUMO3 Conjugation Using SILAC-Based Quantitative Proteomics
Transient cerebral ischemia dramatically activates small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO2/3) conjugation. In cells exposed to 6 h of transient oxygen/glucose deprivation (OGD), a model of ischemia, SUMOylation increases profoundly between 0 and 30 min following re-oxygenation. To elucidate the effect of transient OGD on SUMO conjugation of target proteins, we exposed neuroblastoma B35 cells expressing HA-SUMO3 to transient OGD and used stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) to quantify OGD-induced changes in levels of specific SUMOylated proteins. Lysates from control and OGD-treated cells were mixed equally, and HA-tagged proteins were immunoprecipitated and analyzed by 1D-SDS-PAGE–LC–MS/MS. We identified 188 putative SUMO3-conjugated proteins, including numerous transcription factors and coregulators, and PIAS2 and PIAS4 SUMO ligases, of which 22 were increased or decreased more than ±2-fold. In addition to SUMO3, the levels of protein-conjugated SUMO1 and SUMO2, as well as ubiquitin, were all increased. Importantly, protein ubiquitination induced by OGD was completely blocked by gene silencing of SUMO2/3. Collectively, these results suggest several mechanisms for OGD-modulated SUMOylation, point to a number of signaling pathways that may be targets of SUMO-based signaling and recovery from ischemic stress, and demonstrate a tightly controlled crosstalk between the SUMO and ubiquitin conjugation pathways
Proteomic Analysis of Human Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid after Subsgemental Exposure
The analysis of airway fluid, as
sampled by bronchoalveolar lavage
(BAL), provides a minimally invasive route to interrogate lung biology
in health and disease. Here, we used immunodepletion, coupled with
gel- and label-free LC–MS/MS, for quantitation of the BAL fluid
(BALF) proteome in samples recovered from human subjects following
bronchoscopic instillation of saline, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or
house dust mite antigen into three distinct lung subsegments. Among
more than 200 unique proteins quantified across nine samples, neutrophil
granule-derived and acute phase proteins were most highly enriched
in the LPS-exposed lobes. Of these, peptidoglycan response protein
1 was validated and confirmed as a novel marker of neutrophilic inflammation.
Compared to a prior transcriptomic analysis of airway cells in this
same cohort, the BALF proteome revealed a novel set of response factors.
Independent of exposure, the enrichment of tracheal-expressed proteins
in right lower lung lobes suggests a potential for constitutive intralobar
variability in the BALF proteome; sampling of multiple lung subsegments
also appears to aid in the identification of protein signatures that
differentiate individuals at baseline. Collectively, this proof-of-concept
study validates a robust workflow for BALF proteomics and demonstrates
the complementary nature of proteomic and genomic techniques for investigating
airway (patho)Âphysiology
Longitudinal Study of Differential Protein Expression in an Alzheimer’s Mouse Model Lacking Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase
Alzheimer’s
disease (AD) is a complex neurodegenerative
process that involves altered brain immune, neuronal and metabolic
functions. Understanding the underlying mechanisms has relied on mouse
models that mimic components of AD pathology. We used gel-free, label-free
LC–MS/MS to quantify protein and phosphopeptide levels in brains
of APPSwDI/NOS2–/– (CVN–AD) mice. CVN–AD
mice show a full spectrum of AD-like pathology, including amyloid
deposition, hyperphosphorylated and aggregated tau, and neuronal loss
that worsens with age. Tryptic digests, with or without phosphopeptide
enrichment on an automated titanium dioxide LC system, were separated
by online two-dimensional LC and analyzed on a Waters Synapt G2 HDMS,
yielding relative expression for >950 proteins and >1100 phosphopeptides.
Among differentially expressed proteins were known markers found in
humans with AD, including GFAP and C1Q. Phosphorylation of connexin
43, not previously described in AD, was increased at 42 weeks, consistent
with dysregulation of gap junctions and activation of astrocytes.
Additional alterations in phosphoproteins suggests dysregulation of
mitochondria, synaptic transmission, vesicle trafficking, and innate
immune pathways. These data validate the CVN–AD mouse model
of AD, identify novel disease and age-related changes in the brain
during disease progression, and demonstrate the utility of integrating
unbiased and phosphoproteomics for understanding disease processes
in AD
Identification and Quantitation of Coding Variants and Isoforms of Pulmonary Surfactant Protein A
Pulmonary
surfactant protein A (SP-A), a heterooligomer of SP-A1
and SP-A2, is an important regulator of innate immunity of the lung.
Nonsynonymous single nucleotide variants of SP-A have been linked
to respiratory diseases, but the expressed repertoire of SP-A protein
in human airway has not been investigated. Here, we used parallel
trypsin and Glu-C digestion, followed by LC–MS/MS, to obtain
sequence coverage of common SP-A variants and isoform-determining
peptides. We further developed a SDS-PAGE-based, multiple reaction
monitoring (GeLC-MRM) assay for enrichment and targeted quantitation
of total SP-A, the SP-A2 isoform, and the Gln223 and Lys223 variants
of SP-A, from as little as one milliliter of bronchoalveolar lavage
fluid. This assay identified individuals with the three genotypes
at the 223 position of SP-A2: homozygous major (Gln223/Gln223), homozygous
minor (Lys223/Lys223), or heterozygous (Gln223/Lys223). More generally,
our studies demonstrate the challenges inherent in distinguishing
highly homologous, copurifying protein isoforms by MS and show the
applicability of MRM mass spectrometry for identification and quantitation
of nonsynonymous single nucleotide variants and other proteoforms
in airway lining fluid
Image4_Proteomic and phosphoproteomic characterization of cardiovascular tissues after long term exposure to simulated space radiation.jpeg
Introduction: It may take decades to develop cardiovascular dysfunction following exposure to high doses of ionizing radiation from medical therapy or from nuclear accidents. Since astronauts may be exposed continually to a complex space radiation environment unlike that experienced on Earth, it is unresolved whether there is a risk to cardiovascular health during long-term space exploration missions. Previously, we have described that mice exposed to a single dose of simplified Galactic Cosmic Ray (GCR5-ion) develop cardiovascular dysfunction by 12 months post-radiation.Methods: To investigate the biological basis of this dysfunction, here we performed a quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics analysis of heart tissue (proteome and phosphoproteome) and plasma (proteome only) from these mice at 8 months post-radiation.Results: Differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) for irradiated versus sham irradiated samples (fold-change ≥1.2 and an adjusted p-value of ≤0.05) were identified for each proteomics data set. For the heart proteome, there were 87 significant DEPs (11 upregulated and 76 downregulated); for the heart phosphoproteome, there were 60 significant differentially phosphorylated peptides (17 upregulated and 43 downregulated); and for the plasma proteome, there was only one upregulated protein. A Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) technique that assesses canonical pathways from BIOCARTA, KEGG, PID, REACTOME, and WikiPathways revealed significant perturbation in pathways in each data set. For the heart proteome, 166 pathways were significantly altered (36 upregulated and 130 downregulated); for the plasma proteome, there were 73 pathways significantly altered (25 upregulated and 48 downregulated); and for the phosphoproteome, there were 223 pathways significantly affected at 0.1 adjusted p-value cutoff. Pathways related to inflammation were the most highly perturbed in the heart and plasma. In line with sustained inflammation, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) were demonstrated to be increased in GCR5-ion irradiated hearts at 12-month post irradiation. NETs play a fundamental role in combating bacterial pathogens, modulating inflammatory responses, inflicting damage on healthy tissues, and escalating vascular thrombosis.Discussion: These findings suggest that a single exposure to GCR5-ion results in long-lasting changes in the proteome and that these proteomic changes can potentiate acute and chronic health issues for astronauts, such as what we have previously described with late cardiac dysfunction in these mice.</p
Proteomic Analysis of Primary Human Airway Epithelial Cells Exposed to the Respiratory Toxicant Diacetyl
Occupational
exposures
to the diketone flavoring agent, diacetyl,
have been associated with bronchiolitis obliterans, a rare condition
of airway fibrosis. Model studies in rodents have suggested that the
airway epithelium is a major site of diacetyl toxicity, but the effects
of diacetyl exposure upon the human airway epithelium are poorly characterized.
Here we performed quantitative LC–MS/MS-based proteomics to
study the effects of repeated diacetyl vapor exposures on 3D organotypic
cultures of human primary tracheobronchial epithelial cells. Using
a label-free approach, we quantified approximately 3400 proteins and
5700 phosphopeptides in cell lysates across four independent donors.
Altered expression of proteins and phosphopeptides were suggestive
of loss of cilia and increased squamous differentiation in diacetyl-exposed
cells. These phenomena were confirmed by immunofluorescence staining
of culture cross sections. Hyperphosphorylation and cross-linking
of basal cell keratins were also observed in diacetyl-treated cells,
and we used parallel reaction monitoring to confidently localize and
quantify previously uncharacterized sites of phosphorylation in keratin
6. Collectively, these data identify numerous molecular changes in
the epithelium that may be important to the pathogenesis of flavoring-induced
bronchiolitis obliterans. More generally, this study highlights the
utility of quantitative proteomics for the study of in vitro models
of airway injury and disease
Image3_Proteomic and phosphoproteomic characterization of cardiovascular tissues after long term exposure to simulated space radiation.jpeg
Introduction: It may take decades to develop cardiovascular dysfunction following exposure to high doses of ionizing radiation from medical therapy or from nuclear accidents. Since astronauts may be exposed continually to a complex space radiation environment unlike that experienced on Earth, it is unresolved whether there is a risk to cardiovascular health during long-term space exploration missions. Previously, we have described that mice exposed to a single dose of simplified Galactic Cosmic Ray (GCR5-ion) develop cardiovascular dysfunction by 12 months post-radiation.Methods: To investigate the biological basis of this dysfunction, here we performed a quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics analysis of heart tissue (proteome and phosphoproteome) and plasma (proteome only) from these mice at 8 months post-radiation.Results: Differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) for irradiated versus sham irradiated samples (fold-change ≥1.2 and an adjusted p-value of ≤0.05) were identified for each proteomics data set. For the heart proteome, there were 87 significant DEPs (11 upregulated and 76 downregulated); for the heart phosphoproteome, there were 60 significant differentially phosphorylated peptides (17 upregulated and 43 downregulated); and for the plasma proteome, there was only one upregulated protein. A Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) technique that assesses canonical pathways from BIOCARTA, KEGG, PID, REACTOME, and WikiPathways revealed significant perturbation in pathways in each data set. For the heart proteome, 166 pathways were significantly altered (36 upregulated and 130 downregulated); for the plasma proteome, there were 73 pathways significantly altered (25 upregulated and 48 downregulated); and for the phosphoproteome, there were 223 pathways significantly affected at 0.1 adjusted p-value cutoff. Pathways related to inflammation were the most highly perturbed in the heart and plasma. In line with sustained inflammation, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) were demonstrated to be increased in GCR5-ion irradiated hearts at 12-month post irradiation. NETs play a fundamental role in combating bacterial pathogens, modulating inflammatory responses, inflicting damage on healthy tissues, and escalating vascular thrombosis.Discussion: These findings suggest that a single exposure to GCR5-ion results in long-lasting changes in the proteome and that these proteomic changes can potentiate acute and chronic health issues for astronauts, such as what we have previously described with late cardiac dysfunction in these mice.</p
Image1_Proteomic and phosphoproteomic characterization of cardiovascular tissues after long term exposure to simulated space radiation.jpeg
Introduction: It may take decades to develop cardiovascular dysfunction following exposure to high doses of ionizing radiation from medical therapy or from nuclear accidents. Since astronauts may be exposed continually to a complex space radiation environment unlike that experienced on Earth, it is unresolved whether there is a risk to cardiovascular health during long-term space exploration missions. Previously, we have described that mice exposed to a single dose of simplified Galactic Cosmic Ray (GCR5-ion) develop cardiovascular dysfunction by 12 months post-radiation.Methods: To investigate the biological basis of this dysfunction, here we performed a quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics analysis of heart tissue (proteome and phosphoproteome) and plasma (proteome only) from these mice at 8 months post-radiation.Results: Differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) for irradiated versus sham irradiated samples (fold-change ≥1.2 and an adjusted p-value of ≤0.05) were identified for each proteomics data set. For the heart proteome, there were 87 significant DEPs (11 upregulated and 76 downregulated); for the heart phosphoproteome, there were 60 significant differentially phosphorylated peptides (17 upregulated and 43 downregulated); and for the plasma proteome, there was only one upregulated protein. A Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) technique that assesses canonical pathways from BIOCARTA, KEGG, PID, REACTOME, and WikiPathways revealed significant perturbation in pathways in each data set. For the heart proteome, 166 pathways were significantly altered (36 upregulated and 130 downregulated); for the plasma proteome, there were 73 pathways significantly altered (25 upregulated and 48 downregulated); and for the phosphoproteome, there were 223 pathways significantly affected at 0.1 adjusted p-value cutoff. Pathways related to inflammation were the most highly perturbed in the heart and plasma. In line with sustained inflammation, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) were demonstrated to be increased in GCR5-ion irradiated hearts at 12-month post irradiation. NETs play a fundamental role in combating bacterial pathogens, modulating inflammatory responses, inflicting damage on healthy tissues, and escalating vascular thrombosis.Discussion: These findings suggest that a single exposure to GCR5-ion results in long-lasting changes in the proteome and that these proteomic changes can potentiate acute and chronic health issues for astronauts, such as what we have previously described with late cardiac dysfunction in these mice.</p