Quantitative proteome comparison of human hearts with those of model organisms
Autor: | Jesper V. Olsen, Nora Linscheid, Christian Stolte, Alberto Santos, Lars Juhl Jensen, Pia R. Lundegaard, Morten S. Olesen, Johan Z. Ye, Pi Camilla Poulsen, Kirstine Calloe, Ulrike Leurs, Morten B. Thomsen, Bo Hjorth Bentzen, Robert W. Mills, Alicia Lundby |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Proteomics
0301 basic medicine Proteome Swine Biopsy Protein Expression ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Mice Mathematical and Statistical Techniques 0302 clinical medicine Medicine and Health Sciences Cardiac Atria Biology (General) Zebrafish Principal Component Analysis General Neuroscience Statistics Methods and Resources Eukaryota Heart Animal Models Experimental Organism Systems Osteichthyes Organ Specificity Vertebrates Physical Sciences Models Animal Anatomy General Agricultural and Biological Sciences Cardiac Ventricles QH301-705.5 Heart Ventricles Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures Computational biology Biology Research and Analysis Methods General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology 03 medical and health sciences Model Organisms Species Specificity Gene Expression and Vector Techniques Animals Humans Horses Statistical Methods Molecular Biology Techniques Model organism Molecular Biology Gene Molecular Biology Assays and Analysis Techniques General Immunology and Microbiology ved/biology Myocardium Organisms Biology and Life Sciences Cardiac Ventricle biology.organism_classification Rats Fish 030104 developmental biology Cardiac chamber Multivariate Analysis Cardiovascular Anatomy Animal Studies Zoology Protein Processing Post-Translational Mathematics Function (biology) |
Zdroj: | PLoS Biology, Vol 19, Iss 4, p e3001144 (2021) Linscheid, N, Santos, A, Poulsen, P C, Mills, R W, Calloe, K, Leurs, U, Ye, J Z, Stolte, C, Thomsen, M B, Bentzen, B H, Lundegaard, P R, Olesen, M S, Jensen, L J, Olsen, J V & Lundby, A 2021, ' Quantitative proteome comparison of human hearts with those of model organisms ', PLOS Biology, vol. 19, no. 4, e3001144 . https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001144 PLoS Biology |
ISSN: | 1545-7885 1544-9173 |
Popis: | Delineating human cardiac pathologies and their basic molecular mechanisms relies on research conducted in model organisms. Yet translating findings from preclinical models to humans present a significant challenge, in part due to differences in cardiac protein expression between humans and model organisms. Proteins immediately determine cellular function, yet their large-scale investigation in hearts has lagged behind those of genes and transcripts. Here, we set out to bridge this knowledge gap: By analyzing protein profiles in humans and commonly used model organisms across cardiac chambers, we determine their commonalities and regional differences. We analyzed cardiac tissue from each chamber of human, pig, horse, rat, mouse, and zebrafish in biological replicates. Using mass spectrometry–based proteomics workflows, we measured and evaluated the abundance of approximately 7,000 proteins in each species. The resulting knowledgebase of cardiac protein signatures is accessible through an online database: atlas.cardiacproteomics.com. Our combined analysis allows for quantitative evaluation of protein abundances across cardiac chambers, as well as comparisons of cardiac protein profiles across model organisms. Up to a quarter of proteins with differential abundances between atria and ventricles showed opposite chamber-specific enrichment between species; these included numerous proteins implicated in cardiac disease. The generated proteomics resource facilitates translational prospects of cardiac studies from model organisms to humans by comparisons of disease-linked protein networks across species. This study provides protein abundance profiles for thousands of proteins across cardiac chambers for humans and five commonly used model organisms. This quantitative proteomics dataset represents the most comprehensive such resource to date, and can be queried via a web browser to identify the most appropriate model organism for future studies. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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