| Literature DB >> 23082082 |
Eric R Secor1, Steven M Szczepanek, Anurag Singh, Linda Guernsey, Prabitha Natarajan, Karim Rezaul, David K Han, Roger S Thrall, Lawrence K Silbart.
Abstract
Bromelain (Br) is a cysteine peptidase (GenBank AEH26024.1) from pineapple, with over 40 years of clinical use. The constituents mediating its anti-inflammatory activity are not thoroughly characterized and no peptide biomarker exists. Our objective is to characterize Br raw material and identify peptides in the plasma of Br treated mice. After SDS-PAGE in-gel digestion, Br (VN#3507; Middletown, CT, USA) peptides were analyzed via LC/MS/MS using 95% protein probability, 95% peptide probability, and a minimum peptide number = 5. Br spiked mouse plasma (1 ug/ul) and plasma from i.p. treated mice (12 mg/kg) were assessed using SRM. In Br raw material, we identified seven proteins: four proteases, one jacalin-like lectin, and two protease inhibitors. In Br spiked mouse plasma, six proteins (ananain, bromelain inhibitor, cysteine proteinase AN11, FB1035 precursor, FBSB precursor, and jacalin-like lectin) were identified. Using LC/MS/MS, we identified the unique peptide, DYGAVNEVK, derived from FB1035, in the plasma of i.p. Br treated mice. The spectral count of this peptide peaked at 6 hrs and was undetectable by 24 hrs. In this study, a novel Br peptide was identified in the plasma of treated mice for the first time. This Br peptide could serve as a biomarker to standardize the therapeutic dose and maximize clinical utility.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23082082 PMCID: PMC3467939 DOI: 10.1155/2012/548486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Bromelain identity and quality control data.
| Item profile | Specification | Result | Method | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botanical-pineapple |
|
| Visual | |
| Plant parts used | Mature plant stem | Mature plant stem | Visual | |
| Botanical extract | Bromelain | Bromelain | Maltodextrin diluent | |
| Identification | Standard Match (Sigma) | Conforms to standard | HPLC* | |
| Activity, potency | ≥2400 GDU**/gram | 2931 GDU/gram | GDU Assay | |
| Solvent Residues | LOQ‡ Limits USP | |||
| Methanol | 1000 ppm | 3000 ppm | <1000 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Ethanol | 1000 ppm | 5000 ppm | <1000 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Diethyl ether | 2 ppm | 5000 ppm | <2.0 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Acetone | 50 ppm | 5000 ppm | <50 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| 2-Propanol | 200 ppm | 5000 ppm | <1200 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Dichloromethane | 2 ppm | 600 ppm | <2.0 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| n-Hexane (C6) | 2 ppm | 290 ppm | <2.0 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Ethyl acetate | 20 ppm | 5000 ppm | <20.0 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Xylenes (0, M, P, EB) | 1 ppm | 2170 ppm | ≤1.0 ppm | Gas chromatography |
| Microbial Profile | (CFU/gm) | (CFU/gm) | ||
| Total mold and yeast | ≤300/gram | 160 | MLP° USP 27 | |
|
| Negative | Negative | MLP USP 27 | |
|
| Negative | Negative | MLP USP 27 | |
|
| ≤10 CFU/gram | <10/gram | MLP USP 27 | |
|
| Negative | Negative | MLP USP 27 | |
|
| Negative | Negative | MLP USP 27 | |
| Aflatoxin Profile | Aflatoxins ≤20 ppb | Negative | HPLC | |
| Heavy metal profile | ||||
| Arsenic | ≤3 ppm | <0.50 ± 0.5 ppm | ICP-MS! | |
| Lead | ≤10 ppm | 0.08 ± 0.05 ppm | ICP-MS | |
| Cadmium | ≤3 ppm | <0.25 ± 0.25 ppm | ICP-MS | |
| Mercury | ≤2 ppm | <0.10 ± 0.1 ppm | ICP-MS | |
*HPLC: high-performance liquid chromatography, **GDU's: gelatin dissolving units; LOQ‡: limit of quantification, °microbial limit tests; ! ICP-MS: inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry; #CDFA: California Department of Food and Agriculture.
Figure 1Bromelain characterization flow diagram. A clinically used quality verified Br product (A) was processed and electrophoresed on 1D SDS PAGE mini gel (B). The mobility region was excised and gel digests were analyzed via LC-MS/MS for protein identification. Production data were searched against all kingdoms of the NCBInr database via Mascot search engine and files were parsed into the Scaffold proteome program (C). After i.p. Br treatment (D) plasma samples were assed via SRM for presence of Br specific peptides and DYGAVNEVK was identified and quantified over 24 hrs (E).
Bromelain LC/MS/MS protein identification: raw material corresponds to spiked plasma.
| Protein name | Accession number | MW (kDa) | Unique peptides | Match probabilty | Sequence aa coverage | ID in raw material and plasma |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (A) FB1035 precursor | gi∣2463588 | 36.2 | 14 | 100% | 165/356 (46%) | Y |
| (B) Cysteine proteinase precursor N11 | gi∣3377950 | 39.6 | 7 | 100% | 99/357 (28%) | Y |
| (C) Ananain | gi∣2623956 | 38.2 | 11 | 100% | 140/345 (41%) | Y |
| (D) Bromelain inhibitor | gi∣110282975 | 27.5 | 5 | 100% | 50/246 (20%) | Y |
| (E) Jacalin-like lectin | gi∣33323037 | 15.5 | 9 | 100% | 125/145 (86%) | Y |
| (F) FBSB precursor | gi∣2463584 | 39.6 | 14 | 100% | 165/356 (46%) | Y |
Figure 2Br protein quantitation. Data filtering limits were set at a protein probability ≥95%, peptide probability ≥95%, and a minimum peptide number of 5. Six proteins were quantitated with a 100% probability of match. FB1035 precursor (a), Cysteine proteinase precursor ANll (b), Ananain (c), Br inhibitor (d) FBSB jacalin-like lectin (e), and the FBSB precursor (f). The ion spectrum (g) is shown for the DYGAVNEVK peptide in the FB1035 precursor (box in A).
Figure 3Bromelain LC-MS/MS and DYGAVNEVK peptide quantification. Individual mice were treated with Br (one–12 mg/kg i.p. injection) and peripheral blood was collected via cardiac puncture at 3, 6, 12, and 24 hrs and processed. Plasma was collected and processed, and filtrate was analyzed by LC-MS/MS. The total number of spectra of peptide “DYGAVNEVK” from Br protein FB1035 precursor was identified in sera peaking at 6 hrs over the 24 hr time course.