Quantitative Analysis of Human Pluripotency and Neural Specification by In-Depth (Phospho)Proteomic Profiling

Autor: Brian T. D. Tobe, Alicia M. Winquist, Laurence M. Brill, Gustavo J. Gutierrez, Andrew Crain, Stuart A. Lipton, Junjie Hou, Jennifer Choy, Kutbuddin S. Doctor, Maria Talantova, Evan Y. Snyder, Esther La Monaca, Dieter A. Wolf, Xiayu Huang, David Horn, Ilyas Singec
Přispěvatelé: Biology
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2016
Předmět:
0301 basic medicine
Proteomics
Proteome
Cellular differentiation
Stem Cell Research - Embryonic - Non-Human
Regenerative Medicine
Biochemistry
0302 clinical medicine
Induced pluripotent stem cell
lcsh:QH301-705.5
Cells
Cultured

Neurons
lcsh:R5-920
Cultured
Cell Differentiation
Neural stem cell
3. Good health
Cell biology
Gene Knockdown Techniques
Stem cell
lcsh:Medicine (General)
Neural development
Signal Transduction
Resource
Pluripotent Stem Cells
Cells
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Clinical Sciences
Biology
03 medical and health sciences
Underpinning research
Genetics
Animals
Humans
Cell Lineage
Stem Cell Research - Embryonic - Human
Transplantation
Proteomic Profiling
Gene Expression Profiling
Neurosciences
Computational Biology
Cell Biology
Stem Cell Research
Phosphoproteins
Embryonic stem cell
030104 developmental biology
lcsh:Biology (General)
Generic health relevance
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Transcriptome
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Developmental Biology
Zdroj: Stem Cell Reports
Stem Cell Reports, Vol 7, Iss 3, Pp 527-542 (2016)
Stem cell reports, vol 7, iss 3
ISSN: 2213-6711
Popis: Summary Controlled differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can be utilized for precise analysis of cell type identities during early development. We established a highly efficient neural induction strategy and an improved analytical platform, and determined proteomic and phosphoproteomic profiles of hESCs and their specified multipotent neural stem cell derivatives (hNSCs). This quantitative dataset (nearly 13,000 proteins and 60,000 phosphorylation sites) provides unique molecular insights into pluripotency and neural lineage entry. Systems-level comparative analysis of proteins (e.g., transcription factors, epigenetic regulators, kinase families), phosphorylation sites, and numerous biological pathways allowed the identification of distinct signatures in pluripotent and multipotent cells. Furthermore, as predicted by the dataset, we functionally validated an autocrine/paracrine mechanism by demonstrating that the secreted protein midkine is a regulator of neural specification. This resource is freely available to the scientific community, including a searchable website, PluriProt.
Highlights • Controlled neural induction produces pure cultures of PAX6+ neural stem cells • Most comprehensive (phospho)proteome mapping in pluripotent and multipotent cells • Prediction and validation of midkine as regulator of neural lineage commitment • Searchable and publicly available website presenting (phospho)proteomic dataset
Snyder, Brill, Singec, and colleagues demonstrate detailed analysis of human pluripotency and controlled neural lineage entry by using quantitative label-free (phospho)proteomics. The accuracy of the large dataset (13,000 proteins; 60,000 non-redundant phosphorylation sites) allows precise characterization and comparison of pluripotent and multipotent “stemness.” Functional follow-up experiments validate that the understudied protein midkine controls neuralization of hESCs.
Databáze: OpenAIRE