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Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells

BACKGROUND: Telomerase confers cellular immortality by elongating telomeres, thereby circumventing the Hayflick limit. Extended-life-span cells have been generated by transfection with the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene. hTERT transfected cell lines may be of outstanding interes...

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Autores principales: Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D, Gabelica, Valérie, Smargiasso, Nicolas, Fléron, Maximilien, Ashimwe, Wilson, Rosu, Frédéric, De Pauw-Gillet, Marie-Claire, Riou, Jean-François, De Pauw, Edwin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2386453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18419814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-5956-6-12
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author Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D
Gabelica, Valérie
Smargiasso, Nicolas
Fléron, Maximilien
Ashimwe, Wilson
Rosu, Frédéric
De Pauw-Gillet, Marie-Claire
Riou, Jean-François
De Pauw, Edwin
author_facet Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D
Gabelica, Valérie
Smargiasso, Nicolas
Fléron, Maximilien
Ashimwe, Wilson
Rosu, Frédéric
De Pauw-Gillet, Marie-Claire
Riou, Jean-François
De Pauw, Edwin
author_sort Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Telomerase confers cellular immortality by elongating telomeres, thereby circumventing the Hayflick limit. Extended-life-span cells have been generated by transfection with the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene. hTERT transfected cell lines may be of outstanding interest to monitor the effect of drugs targeting the telomerase activity. The incidence of hTERT gene transfection at the proteome level is a prerequisite to that purpose. The effect of the transfection has been studied on the proteome of human fibroblast (WI38). Cytosolic and nuclear fractions of WI38 cells, empty vector transfected WI38 (WI38-HPV) and hTERT WI38 cells were submitted to a 2D-DIGE (Two-Dimensional Differential In-Gel Electrophoresis) analysis. Only spots that had a similar abundance in WI38 and WI38-HPV, but were differentially expressed in WI38 hTERT were selected for MS identification. This method directly points to the proteins linked with the hTERT expression. Number of false positive differentially expressed proteins has been excluded by using control WI38-HPV cells. The proteome alteration induced by hTERT WI38 transfection should be taken into account in subsequent use of the cell line for anti-telomerase drugs evaluation. RESULTS: 2D-DIGE experiment shows that 57 spots out of 2246 are significantly differentially expressed in the cytosolic fraction due to hTERT transfection, and 38 were confidently identified. In the nuclear fraction, 44 spots out of 2172 were selected in the differential proteome analysis, and 14 were identified. The results show that, in addition to elongating telomeres, hTERT gene transfection has other physiological roles, among which an enhanced ER capacity and a potent cell protection against apoptosis. CONCLUSION: We show that the methodology reduces the complexity of the proteome analysis and highlights proteins implicated in other processes than telomere elongation. hTERT induced proteome changes suggest that telomerase expression enhances natural cell repair mechanisms and stress resistance probably required for long term resistance of immortalized cells. Thus, hTERT transfected cells can not be only consider as an immortal equivalent to parental cells but also as cells which are over-resistant to stresses. These findings are the prerequisite for any larger proteomics aiming to evaluate anti-telomerase drugs proteome alteration and thus therapeutics induced cell reactions.
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spelling pubmed-23864532008-05-16 Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D Gabelica, Valérie Smargiasso, Nicolas Fléron, Maximilien Ashimwe, Wilson Rosu, Frédéric De Pauw-Gillet, Marie-Claire Riou, Jean-François De Pauw, Edwin Proteome Sci Methodology BACKGROUND: Telomerase confers cellular immortality by elongating telomeres, thereby circumventing the Hayflick limit. Extended-life-span cells have been generated by transfection with the human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) gene. hTERT transfected cell lines may be of outstanding interest to monitor the effect of drugs targeting the telomerase activity. The incidence of hTERT gene transfection at the proteome level is a prerequisite to that purpose. The effect of the transfection has been studied on the proteome of human fibroblast (WI38). Cytosolic and nuclear fractions of WI38 cells, empty vector transfected WI38 (WI38-HPV) and hTERT WI38 cells were submitted to a 2D-DIGE (Two-Dimensional Differential In-Gel Electrophoresis) analysis. Only spots that had a similar abundance in WI38 and WI38-HPV, but were differentially expressed in WI38 hTERT were selected for MS identification. This method directly points to the proteins linked with the hTERT expression. Number of false positive differentially expressed proteins has been excluded by using control WI38-HPV cells. The proteome alteration induced by hTERT WI38 transfection should be taken into account in subsequent use of the cell line for anti-telomerase drugs evaluation. RESULTS: 2D-DIGE experiment shows that 57 spots out of 2246 are significantly differentially expressed in the cytosolic fraction due to hTERT transfection, and 38 were confidently identified. In the nuclear fraction, 44 spots out of 2172 were selected in the differential proteome analysis, and 14 were identified. The results show that, in addition to elongating telomeres, hTERT gene transfection has other physiological roles, among which an enhanced ER capacity and a potent cell protection against apoptosis. CONCLUSION: We show that the methodology reduces the complexity of the proteome analysis and highlights proteins implicated in other processes than telomere elongation. hTERT induced proteome changes suggest that telomerase expression enhances natural cell repair mechanisms and stress resistance probably required for long term resistance of immortalized cells. Thus, hTERT transfected cells can not be only consider as an immortal equivalent to parental cells but also as cells which are over-resistant to stresses. These findings are the prerequisite for any larger proteomics aiming to evaluate anti-telomerase drugs proteome alteration and thus therapeutics induced cell reactions. BioMed Central 2008-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2386453/ /pubmed/18419814 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-5956-6-12 Text en Copyright © 2008 Mazzucchelli et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Mazzucchelli, Gabriel D
Gabelica, Valérie
Smargiasso, Nicolas
Fléron, Maximilien
Ashimwe, Wilson
Rosu, Frédéric
De Pauw-Gillet, Marie-Claire
Riou, Jean-François
De Pauw, Edwin
Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title_full Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title_fullStr Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title_full_unstemmed Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title_short Proteome alteration induced by hTERT transfection of human fibroblast cells
title_sort proteome alteration induced by htert transfection of human fibroblast cells
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2386453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18419814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-5956-6-12
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