| Literature DB >> 19719850 |
Gisele G Tomazella1, Idalete da Silva, Helen J Laure, José C Rosa, Roger Chammas, Harald G Wiker, Gustavo A de Souza, Lewis J Greene.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neutrophils are the most abundant leukocytes in peripheral blood and represent one of the most important elements of innate immunity. Recent subcellular proteomic studies have focused on the identification of human neutrophil proteins in various subcellular membrane and granular fractions. Although there are relatively few studies dealing with the analysis of the total extract of human neutrophils, many biological problems such as the role of chemokines, adhesion molecules, and other activating inputs involved in neutrophil responses and signaling can be approached on the basis of the identification of the total cellular proteins.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19719850 PMCID: PMC3224919 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5956-7-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Figure 1Analysis of human neutrophil morphology, size and activation status. A) Neutrophils stained with May-Grunwald-Giemsa were visualized by light microscopy at 1000 × magnification; B) homogeneity of the cells, 95.2% neutrophils (R1), 2.9% mononuclear cells (R2) and 1.9% RBCs and/or debris (R3), was evaluated by flow cytometry based on size (FSC) and internal complexity (SSC); C) analysis of the activation status using IgG2a (99%) as control isotype, and D) anti-CD62-L antibody indicating that 80% of the neutrophils were not activated.
Figure 2Total extract of resting human neutrophils separated by 1D SDS-PAGE. The protein extract was submitted to SDS-PAGE separation, stained with Coomassie Blue and cut into 20 horizontal bands. Each gel band was hydrolyzed with trypsin and the tryptic peptides were analyzed by LC-MS/MS. Lane 1: molecular weight standards (kDa); Lanes 2 and 3: 50 μg in duplicate of human neutrophil extract.
Figure 3MS/MS profile of ion M+2H = 720.887. Tandem mass spectrum of parent ion (indicated by Pi in the Figure). As the result of collisions, the peptide was randomly fragmented at each peptide bond, resulting in carboxy-terminal y ions or amino-terminal b ions. When the fragment masses were submitted to Mascot, the peptide was identified as LGLGADVAQVTGALR from protein matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) (inset, with detected y and b ions represented).
Comparison of the proteins identified in the present study and the proteins identified in other neutrophil proteome studies.
| Proteome studies | Piubelli et al [ | Lominadze et al [ | Castro et al [ | Jethwaney et al [ | Uriarte et al [ | Xu et al [ | Present study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extract or organelles | Total extract | Granules | Total extract | Secretory vesicles and plasma membranes | Secretory vesicles and plasma membranes | Cytoskeleton | Total extract |
| Methodology employed | 2-DE | 2-DE and LC-MS/MS | 2-DE | 2-DE and LC-MS/MS | LC-MS/MS | 2-DE and LC-MS/MS | LC-MS/MS |
| Number of proteins identified | 52 | 286 | 22 | 80 | 1118 | 138 | 251 |
| Number of proteins in common with the present study | 19 (36%) | 74 (26%) | 1 (4%) | 32 (40%) | 67 (6%) | 34 (25%) | - |
All of the studies were carried out on human neutrophils except for the one by Piubelli et al [16], who studied rat neutrophils
Figure 4Protein Ontology. Identified proteins were classified according to their (A) biological functions and (B) expected subcellular localization.