| Literature DB >> 22132074 |
Xiaoxiao Li1, James LeBlanc, Allison Truong, Ravi Vuthoori, Sharon S Chen, Jonathan L Lustgarten, Bennett Roth, Jeff Allard, Andrew Ippoliti, Laura L Presley, James Borneman, William L Bigbee, Vanathi Gopalakrishnan, Thomas G Graeber, David Elashoff, Jonathan Braun, Lee Goodglick.
Abstract
Aberrant interactions between the host and the intestinal bacteria are thought to contribute to the pathogenesis of many digestive diseases. However, studying the complex ecosystem at the human mucosal-luminal interface (MLI) is challenging and requires an integrative systems biology approach. Therefore, we developed a novel method integrating lavage sampling of the human mucosal surface, high-throughput proteomics, and a unique suite of bioinformatic and statistical analyses. Shotgun proteomic analysis of secreted proteins recovered from the MLI confirmed the presence of both human and bacterial components. To profile the MLI metaproteome, we collected 205 mucosal lavage samples from 38 healthy subjects, and subjected them to high-throughput proteomics. The spectral data were subjected to a rigorous data processing pipeline to optimize suitability for quantitation and analysis, and then were evaluated using a set of biostatistical tools. Compared to the mucosal transcriptome, the MLI metaproteome was enriched for extracellular proteins involved in response to stimulus and immune system processes. Analysis of the metaproteome revealed significant individual-related as well as anatomic region-related (biogeographic) features. Quantitative shotgun proteomics established the identity and confirmed the biogeographic association of 49 proteins (including 3 functional protein networks) demarcating the proximal and distal colon. This robust and integrated proteomic approach is thus effective for identifying functional features of the human mucosal ecosystem, and a fresh understanding of the basic biology and disease processes at the MLI.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22132074 PMCID: PMC3221670 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flowchart of mucosal lavage sampling.
Figure 2Cellular and protein composition at the MLI.
Upper panel: Cytology analysis of the cell pellet obtained from each mucosal lavage sample using gram staining. a.100× b. 500×. Lower panel: Distribution of proteins with different origins identified from the mucosal lavage sample using shotgun proteomic analysis. c. Composition of proteins from all species as identified by tandem MS. Other origin includes phage and amoebozoa. d. Composition of bacterial proteins. Other bacterial origin includes Chlorobi and Cyanobacteria.
Summary of sample collection and clinical traits.
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| 38 | |
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| 205 | |
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| 84 (41%) |
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| 121 (59%) | |
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| 59±10 |
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| 37 (18.0%) |
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| 35 (17.1%) | |
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| 34 (16.6%) | |
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| 38 (18.5%) | |
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| 31 (15.1%) | |
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| 30 (14.6%) | |
Figure 3Reproducibility of metaproteomic analysis.
a. Steps for MALDI-TOF-MS data pre-processing. b. Scatterplot of two samples obtained from the sample subject in adjacent colonic regions (sampling replicates). c. A representative 3D scatterplot of triplicate runs of the same sample (technical replicates).
Figure 4Features of human mucosal metaproteome.
a. PCA analysis revealed PC1 represents the largest component of the overall variance. b. Variance component analysis showed variance in PC1 comes from both individual and biogeographic levels. c. Frequency plot of region-related P-value for each peak from NLME analysis indicated a significant biogeographic feature. d. Frequency plot of gender-related P-value for each peak from NLME analysis indicated no significance. e. Distal colon regions were significantly different from proximal regions in permutation analysis. Only significant P-values (<0.05) were shown.
Figure 5Comparison of lavage and biopsy samples by protein annotations.
a. Biological process. b. Cellular component. c. Molecular function.
Figure 6Heatmap view of proteins identified by shotgun proteomics.
Horizontal tree indicates 18 independent lavage samples. Vertical tree indicates the 49 proteins analyzed, and the protein identities are listed on the right. Three of the proteins clusters showed biogeographic features are bracketed.
Figure 7Boxplots of representative proteins with biogeographic features.
The bottom and top of the boxes are the 25th and 75th percentile (the lower and upper quartiles, respectively), and the band near the middle of the box is the median. The whiskers present minimum to maximum value in the group. CE: cecum. AS: ascending colon. SI: sigmoid colon. RE: rectal colon. ANOVA is used for comparison between different regions. a. IGHA2 (P<0.001). b. KV309 (P<0.001). c. CEL3B (P = 0.017). d. ILEU (P = 0.017). e. MEP1A (P = 0.069). f. MEP1B (P = 0.044). g. ENPP7 (P = 0.014). h. CEAM5 (P<0.001).