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Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart

Rationale: Cell therapy for myocardial infarction is promising but largely unsuccessful in part due to a lack of mechanistic understanding. Techniques enabling identification of stem cell-specific proteomes in situ in the injured heart may shed light on how the administered cells respond to the inju...

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Autores principales: Han, Dunzheng, Yang, Junjie, Zhang, Eric, Liu, Yanwen, Boriboun, Chan, Qiao, Aijun, Yu, Yang, Sun, Jiacheng, Xu, Shiyue, Yang, Liu, Yan, Wenying, Luo, Bihui, Lu, Dongfeng, Zhang, Chunxiang, Jie, Chunfa, Mobley, James, Zhang, Jianyi, Qin, Gangjian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7532665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33042285
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.47893
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author Han, Dunzheng
Yang, Junjie
Zhang, Eric
Liu, Yanwen
Boriboun, Chan
Qiao, Aijun
Yu, Yang
Sun, Jiacheng
Xu, Shiyue
Yang, Liu
Yan, Wenying
Luo, Bihui
Lu, Dongfeng
Zhang, Chunxiang
Jie, Chunfa
Mobley, James
Zhang, Jianyi
Qin, Gangjian
author_facet Han, Dunzheng
Yang, Junjie
Zhang, Eric
Liu, Yanwen
Boriboun, Chan
Qiao, Aijun
Yu, Yang
Sun, Jiacheng
Xu, Shiyue
Yang, Liu
Yan, Wenying
Luo, Bihui
Lu, Dongfeng
Zhang, Chunxiang
Jie, Chunfa
Mobley, James
Zhang, Jianyi
Qin, Gangjian
author_sort Han, Dunzheng
collection PubMed
description Rationale: Cell therapy for myocardial infarction is promising but largely unsuccessful in part due to a lack of mechanistic understanding. Techniques enabling identification of stem cell-specific proteomes in situ in the injured heart may shed light on how the administered cells respond to the injured microenvironment and exert reparative effects. Objective: To identify the proteomes of the transplanted mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in the infarcted myocardium, we sought to target a mutant methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS(L274G)) in MSCs, which charges azidonorleucine (ANL), a methionine analogue and non-canonical amino acid, to tRNA and subsequently to nascent proteins, permitting isolation of ANL-labeled MSC proteomes from ischemic hearts by ANL-alkyne based click reaction. Methods and Results: Murine MSCs were transduced with lentivirus MetRS(L274G) and supplemented with ANL; the ANL-tagged nascent proteins were visualized by bio-orthogonal non-canonical amino-acid tagging, spanning all molecular weights and by fluorescent non-canonical amino-acid tagging, displaying strong fluorescent signal. Then, the MetRS(L274G)-transduced MSCs were administered to the infarcted or Sham heart in mice receiving ANL treatment. The MSC proteomes were isolated from the left ventricular protein lysates by click reaction at days 1, 3, and 7 after cell administration, identified by LC/MS. Among all identified proteins (in Sham and MI hearts, three time-points each), 648 were shared by all 6 groups, accounting for 82±5% of total proteins in each group, and enriched under mitochondrion, extracellular exosomes, oxidation-reduction process and poly(A) RNA binding. Notably, 26, 110 and 65 proteins were significantly up-regulated and 11, 28 and 19 proteins were down-regulated in the infarcted vs. Sham heart at the three time-points, respectively; these proteins are pronounced in the GO terms of extracellular matrix organization, response to stress and regulation of apoptotic process and in the KEGG pathways of complements and coagulation cascades, apoptosis, and regulators of actin cytoskeleton. Conclusions: MetRS(L274G) expression allows successful identification of MSC-specific nascent proteins in the infarcted hearts, which reflect the functional states, adaptive response, and reparative effects of MSCs that may be leveraged to improve cardiac repair.
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spelling pubmed-75326652020-10-08 Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart Han, Dunzheng Yang, Junjie Zhang, Eric Liu, Yanwen Boriboun, Chan Qiao, Aijun Yu, Yang Sun, Jiacheng Xu, Shiyue Yang, Liu Yan, Wenying Luo, Bihui Lu, Dongfeng Zhang, Chunxiang Jie, Chunfa Mobley, James Zhang, Jianyi Qin, Gangjian Theranostics Research Paper Rationale: Cell therapy for myocardial infarction is promising but largely unsuccessful in part due to a lack of mechanistic understanding. Techniques enabling identification of stem cell-specific proteomes in situ in the injured heart may shed light on how the administered cells respond to the injured microenvironment and exert reparative effects. Objective: To identify the proteomes of the transplanted mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in the infarcted myocardium, we sought to target a mutant methionyl-tRNA synthetase (MetRS(L274G)) in MSCs, which charges azidonorleucine (ANL), a methionine analogue and non-canonical amino acid, to tRNA and subsequently to nascent proteins, permitting isolation of ANL-labeled MSC proteomes from ischemic hearts by ANL-alkyne based click reaction. Methods and Results: Murine MSCs were transduced with lentivirus MetRS(L274G) and supplemented with ANL; the ANL-tagged nascent proteins were visualized by bio-orthogonal non-canonical amino-acid tagging, spanning all molecular weights and by fluorescent non-canonical amino-acid tagging, displaying strong fluorescent signal. Then, the MetRS(L274G)-transduced MSCs were administered to the infarcted or Sham heart in mice receiving ANL treatment. The MSC proteomes were isolated from the left ventricular protein lysates by click reaction at days 1, 3, and 7 after cell administration, identified by LC/MS. Among all identified proteins (in Sham and MI hearts, three time-points each), 648 were shared by all 6 groups, accounting for 82±5% of total proteins in each group, and enriched under mitochondrion, extracellular exosomes, oxidation-reduction process and poly(A) RNA binding. Notably, 26, 110 and 65 proteins were significantly up-regulated and 11, 28 and 19 proteins were down-regulated in the infarcted vs. Sham heart at the three time-points, respectively; these proteins are pronounced in the GO terms of extracellular matrix organization, response to stress and regulation of apoptotic process and in the KEGG pathways of complements and coagulation cascades, apoptosis, and regulators of actin cytoskeleton. Conclusions: MetRS(L274G) expression allows successful identification of MSC-specific nascent proteins in the infarcted hearts, which reflect the functional states, adaptive response, and reparative effects of MSCs that may be leveraged to improve cardiac repair. Ivyspring International Publisher 2020-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7532665/ /pubmed/33042285 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.47893 Text en © The author(s) This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Han, Dunzheng
Yang, Junjie
Zhang, Eric
Liu, Yanwen
Boriboun, Chan
Qiao, Aijun
Yu, Yang
Sun, Jiacheng
Xu, Shiyue
Yang, Liu
Yan, Wenying
Luo, Bihui
Lu, Dongfeng
Zhang, Chunxiang
Jie, Chunfa
Mobley, James
Zhang, Jianyi
Qin, Gangjian
Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title_full Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title_fullStr Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title_short Analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
title_sort analysis of mesenchymal stem cell proteomes in situ in the ischemic heart
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7532665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33042285
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.47893
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