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Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models

[Image: see text] Hibernating myocardium is an adaptive response to repetitive myocardial ischemia that is clinically common, but the mechanism of adaptation is poorly understood. Here we compared the proteomes of hibernating versus normal myocardium in a porcine model with 24 biological replicates....

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Autores principales: Qu, Jun, Young, Rebeccah, Page, Brian J., Shen, Xiaomeng, Tata, Nazneen, Li, Jun, Duan, Xiaotao, Fallavollita, James A., Canty, John M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4015685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24697261
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr5000472
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author Qu, Jun
Young, Rebeccah
Page, Brian J.
Shen, Xiaomeng
Tata, Nazneen
Li, Jun
Duan, Xiaotao
Fallavollita, James A.
Canty, John M.
author_facet Qu, Jun
Young, Rebeccah
Page, Brian J.
Shen, Xiaomeng
Tata, Nazneen
Li, Jun
Duan, Xiaotao
Fallavollita, James A.
Canty, John M.
author_sort Qu, Jun
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Hibernating myocardium is an adaptive response to repetitive myocardial ischemia that is clinically common, but the mechanism of adaptation is poorly understood. Here we compared the proteomes of hibernating versus normal myocardium in a porcine model with 24 biological replicates. Using the ion-current-based proteomic strategy optimized in this study to expand upon previous proteomic work, we identified differentially expressed proteins in new molecular pathways of cardiovascular interest. The methodological strategy includes efficient extraction with detergent cocktail; precipitation/digestion procedure with high, quantitative peptide recovery; reproducible nano-LC/MS analysis on a long, heated column packed with small particles; and quantification based on ion-current peak areas. Under the optimized conditions, high efficiency and reproducibility were achieved for each step, which enabled a reliable comparison of 24 the myocardial samples. To achieve confident discovery of differentially regulated proteins in hibernating myocardium, we used highly stringent criteria to define “quantifiable proteins”. These included the filtering criteria of low peptide FDR and S/N > 10 for peptide ion currents, and each protein was quantified independently from ≥2 distinct peptides. For a broad methodological validation, the quantitative results were compared with a parallel, well-validated 2D-DIGE analysis of the same model. Excellent agreement between the two orthogonal methods was observed (R = 0.74), and the ion-current-based method quantified almost one order of magnitude more proteins. In hibernating myocardium, 225 significantly altered proteins were discovered with a low false-discovery rate (∼3%). These proteins are involved in biological processes including metabolism, apoptosis, stress response, contraction, cytoskeleton, transcription, and translation. This provides compelling evidence that hibernating myocardium adapts to chronic ischemia. The major metabolic mechanisms include a down-regulation of mitochondrial respiration and an increase in glycolysis. Meanwhile, cardioprotective and cytoskeletal proteins are increased, while cardiomyocyte contractile proteins are reduced. These intrinsic adaptations to regional ischemia maintain long-term cardiomyocyte viability at the expense of contractile function.
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spelling pubmed-40156852015-03-25 Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models Qu, Jun Young, Rebeccah Page, Brian J. Shen, Xiaomeng Tata, Nazneen Li, Jun Duan, Xiaotao Fallavollita, James A. Canty, John M. J Proteome Res [Image: see text] Hibernating myocardium is an adaptive response to repetitive myocardial ischemia that is clinically common, but the mechanism of adaptation is poorly understood. Here we compared the proteomes of hibernating versus normal myocardium in a porcine model with 24 biological replicates. Using the ion-current-based proteomic strategy optimized in this study to expand upon previous proteomic work, we identified differentially expressed proteins in new molecular pathways of cardiovascular interest. The methodological strategy includes efficient extraction with detergent cocktail; precipitation/digestion procedure with high, quantitative peptide recovery; reproducible nano-LC/MS analysis on a long, heated column packed with small particles; and quantification based on ion-current peak areas. Under the optimized conditions, high efficiency and reproducibility were achieved for each step, which enabled a reliable comparison of 24 the myocardial samples. To achieve confident discovery of differentially regulated proteins in hibernating myocardium, we used highly stringent criteria to define “quantifiable proteins”. These included the filtering criteria of low peptide FDR and S/N > 10 for peptide ion currents, and each protein was quantified independently from ≥2 distinct peptides. For a broad methodological validation, the quantitative results were compared with a parallel, well-validated 2D-DIGE analysis of the same model. Excellent agreement between the two orthogonal methods was observed (R = 0.74), and the ion-current-based method quantified almost one order of magnitude more proteins. In hibernating myocardium, 225 significantly altered proteins were discovered with a low false-discovery rate (∼3%). These proteins are involved in biological processes including metabolism, apoptosis, stress response, contraction, cytoskeleton, transcription, and translation. This provides compelling evidence that hibernating myocardium adapts to chronic ischemia. The major metabolic mechanisms include a down-regulation of mitochondrial respiration and an increase in glycolysis. Meanwhile, cardioprotective and cytoskeletal proteins are increased, while cardiomyocyte contractile proteins are reduced. These intrinsic adaptations to regional ischemia maintain long-term cardiomyocyte viability at the expense of contractile function. American Chemical Society 2014-03-25 2014-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4015685/ /pubmed/24697261 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr5000472 Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
spellingShingle Qu, Jun
Young, Rebeccah
Page, Brian J.
Shen, Xiaomeng
Tata, Nazneen
Li, Jun
Duan, Xiaotao
Fallavollita, James A.
Canty, John M.
Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title_full Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title_fullStr Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title_full_unstemmed Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title_short Reproducible Ion-Current-Based Approach for 24-Plex Comparison of the Tissue Proteomes of Hibernating versus Normal Myocardium in Swine Models
title_sort reproducible ion-current-based approach for 24-plex comparison of the tissue proteomes of hibernating versus normal myocardium in swine models
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4015685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24697261
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/pr5000472
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