| Literature DB >> 22046318 |
Jakob Hansen1, Johan Palmfeldt, Søren Vang, Thomas J Corydon, Niels Gregersen, Peter Bross.
Abstract
Celastrol, a natural substance isolated from plant extracts used in traditional Chinese medicine, has been extensively investigated as a possible drug for treatment of cancer, autoimmune diseases, and protein misfolding disorders. Although studies focusing on celastrol's effects in specific cellular pathways have revealed a considerable number of targets in a diverse array of in vitro models there is an essential need for investigations that can provide a global view of its effects. To assess cellular effects of celastrol and to identify target proteins as biomarkers for monitoring treatment regimes, we performed large-scale quantitative proteomics in cultured human lymphoblastoid cells, a cell type that can be readily prepared from human blood samples. Celastrol substantially modified the proteome composition and 158 of the close to 1800 proteins with robust quantitation showed at least a 1.5 fold change in protein levels. Up-regulated proteins play key roles in cytoprotection with a prominent group involved in quality control and processing of proteins traversing the endoplasmic reticulum. Increased levels of proteins essential for the cellular protection against oxidative stress including heme oxygenase 1, several peroxiredoxins and thioredoxins as well as proteins involved in the control of iron homeostasis were also observed. Specific analysis of the mitochondrial proteome strongly indicated that the mitochondrial association of certain antioxidant defense and apoptosis-regulating proteins increased in cells exposed to celastrol. Analysis of selected mRNA transcripts showed that celastrol activated several different stress response pathways and dose response studies furthermore showed that continuous exposure to sub-micromolar concentrations of celastrol is associated with reduced cellular viability and proliferation. The extensive catalog of regulated proteins presented here identifies numerous cellular effects of celastrol and constitutes a valuable biomarker tool for the development and monitoration of disease treatment strategies.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22046318 PMCID: PMC3202559 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Schematic overview of the SILAC-based experimental design.
Overview of proteins quantified in cellular and mitochondrial proteome approaches.
| Identified Proteins | Proteins with quantitative data | Core proteins | Mitocarta proteins | Core mitocarta proteins | Proteins changed at least 1.5-fold | |
|
| 3342 | 2765 | 1779 | 482 | 314 | 158 |
|
| 2404 | 1822 | 1083 | 498 | 375 | 33 |
*Excluding proteins judged as contaminants or identified in the reversed decoy database.
A quantitative SILAC protein ratio (treated/untreated) was calculated from at least two valid peptide ratio counts.
Based on reference to human Mitocarta, a compendium of genes encoding proteins with solid evidence of mitochondrial origin.
Inclusion criteria: t-test for mean ratio different from 1 (p<0.05), and mean ratio ≥1.5 or mean ratio ≤0.67.
Figure 2Overall distribution of quantitative protein ratios within the cellular proteome study.
(A) The mean treated/untreated ratios for the 1779 cellular core proteins, including 314 of mitochondrial origin (according to human MitoCarta; marked with red cross). The figure insert shows the frequency distribution of the protein ratios (x-axis legends define interval upper limits) and proteins up- or down-regulated at least 1.5 fold are marked by oval circles. Protein ratios were calculated as the median of all SILAC peptide pair ratios identified for a given protein using normalized peptide ratios. (B) The mean treated/untreated ratios for the 375 core mitochondrial proteins. Ratios for mitochondrial core proteins were calculated using peptides intensity ratios that were normalized using only data from proteins listed in MitoCarta.
Figure 3Functional GO categories in which celastrol-regulated proteins are relatively overrepresented.
(A) The distribution frequencies for up-regulated proteins (red bars) into GO categories compared to the corresponding frequencies of the entire collection of proteins quantified in the cellular proteome study (gray bars). Only Go categories in which a Pearson Chi-Square statistical test indicates a significant overrepresentation of the up-regulated proteins are displayed. (B) Distribution of down-regulated proteins (green bars) into GO categories, analyzed as described in (A).
Functional categorization of up-regulated proteins.
| Functional pathway | Gene name | Ratio (treated/untreated) [Group range]/median |
| Mediators of ER protein homeostasis, ER protein quality control, and trafficking |
| [1.5 ; 2.0]/1.7 |
| Protein quality control in other cell compartments |
| [1.6 ; 6.7]/1.9 |
| Antioxidant defense |
| [1.5 ; 25.0]/1.9 |
| Iron metabolism |
| [1.5 ; 2.5]/1.6 |
| Mitochondrial energy production and metabolism |
| [1.5 ; 2.9]/1.6 |
| Cell death and proliferation |
| [1.5 ; 2.5]/1.8 |
Footnote: Proteins included fulfill the following criteria: Quantified in all three replicates with a mean ratio different from 1 (t-test; p<0.05), and up- or down-regulated at least 1.5 fold by celastrol. Proteins are identified by their corresponding gene name. Proteins quantified in the mitochondrial proteome approach are marked by bold font. Median ratio and range are given for groups of functionally-related proteins.
Functional categorization of down-regulated proteins.
| Functional pathway | Gene name | Ratio (treated/untreated) [Group range]/median |
| Cell division |
| [0.2 ; 0.6]/0.5 |
| DNA replication, transcription, repair, and translation |
| [0.5 ; 0.7]/0.6 |
| Protein sorting |
| [0.5 ; 0.7]/0.6 |
| RNA transport and structure |
| [0.5 ; 0.6]/0.6 |
| Proteins containing Iron/sulfur groups |
| [0.3 ; 0.7]/0.5 |
See footnote in Table 2.
Figure 4Validation of MS-based protein quantification by Western blot analysis of selected proteins.
The soluble protein extracted from cells treated with celastrol or vehicle alone (three cell culturing experiments of each) were separated by SDS-PAGE, blotted onto membranes, and detected using primary antibodies against Hsp70, HO-1, or Hsp60, and fluorescently-labeled secondary antibodies.
Figure 5Time- and dose-dependent effects of celastrol on transcriptional activation and cellular viability activity.
(A) Transcript levels from genes involved in the heat shock response, ER unfolded protein response, anti-oxidant response, and mitochondrial unfolded protein response. The mRNA levels were measured by quantitative RT-PCR following incubation for 8 or 24 h in 1 µM celastrol. Relative mRNA levels were normalized using GAPDH mRNA as a reference and presented relative to levels in untreated control cells. Data are mean of two independent experiments (error bars show the range) and each cDNA was analyzed in triplicate PCR reactions. (B) Time- and dose-dependent inhibition of general gene transcription. The HSPA1B, HSPD1, and ACTB mRNA levels in cells treated with 0.2, 0.5, or 1 µM celastrol for either 8 or 24 h were measured by quantitative RT-PCR. The mRNA levels were normalized to the amount of total RNA used for the RT-PCR reaction and presented relative to levels in untreated cells (arbitrary units, au). Data are mean of two independent experiments (error bars show the range) and each cDNA was analyzed in triplicate PCR reactions. (C) Dose-dependent inhibition of MTT metabolic activity. The metabolic activity/viability following 24 h treatment with varying celastrol concentrations was addressed by quantifying the cellular reduction of MTT into formazan. The amount of MTT reduced in a 4 h period was measured spectrophotometrically by the absorbance Abs [A595–A655] of the formazan product. Each datapoint are the mean of three experiments. Insert: Metabolic activity of cells exposed to 0.8 µM celastrol for 0, 1, 4, and 24 h. Data are mean (+/−SD) of three experiments.
Figure 6Increased mitochondrial association of selected proteins in response to celastrol.
The mean ratio of the 253 core proteins shared by the mitochondrial proteome and the cellular proteome data sets were extracted and presented in a scatter plot. Selected proteins are labeled and putative translocating proteins are enclosed by a circle.
Figure 7Celastrol effect model.
A model illustrating how celastrol-mediated induction of stress response pathways may adapt cells to handle protein misfolding stress and maintain homeostasis or activate cell destructive pathways.