Quantitative Proteomics of
Bronchoalveolar Lavage
Fluid in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
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Abstract
The proteomic analysis of bronchoalveolar
lavage fluid (BALF) can
give insight into pulmonary disease pathology and response to therapy.
Here, we describe the first gel-free quantitative analysis of BALF
in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), a chronic and fatal scarring
lung disease. We utilized two-dimensional reversed-phase liquid chromatography
and ion-mobility-assisted data-independent acquisition (HDMSE) for
quantitation of >1000 proteins in immunodepleted BALF from the
right
middle and lower lobes of normal controls and patients with IPF. Among
the analytes that were increased in IPF were well-described mediators
of pulmonary fibrosis (osteopontin, MMP7, CXCL7, CCL18), eosinophil-
and neutrophil-derived proteins, and proteins associated with fibroblast
foci. For additional discovery and targeted validation, BALF was also
screened by multiple reaction monitoring (MRM), using the JPT Cytokine
SpikeMix library of >400 stable isotope-labeled peptides. A refined
MRM assay confirmed the robust expression of osteopontin, and demonstrated,
for the first time, upregulation of the pro-fibrotic cytokine, CCL24,
in BALF in IPF. These results show the utility of BALF proteomics
for the molecular profiling of fibrotic lung diseases and the targeted
quantitation of soluble markers of IPF. More generally, this study
addresses critical quality control measures that should be widely
applicable to BALF profiling in pulmonary disease