| Literature DB >> 26401315 |
Jocelyn F Krey1, Nicholas E Sherman2, Erin D Jeffery2, Dongseok Choi3, Peter G Barr-Gillespie1.
Abstract
Development of the vertebrate hair bundle is a precisely orchestrated event that culminates in production of a tightly ordered arrangement of actin-rich stereocilia and a single axonemal kinocilium. To understand how the protein composition of the bundle changes during development, we isolated bundles from young (postnatal days P4-P6) and mature (P21-P25) mouse utricles using the twist-off method, then characterized their constituent proteins using liquid-chromatography tandem mass spectrometry with data-dependent acquisition. Using MaxQuant and label-free quantitation, we measured relative abundances of proteins in both bundles and in the whole utricle; comparison of protein abundance between the two fractions allows calculation of enrichment in bundles. These data, which are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD002167, will be useful for examining the proteins present in mammalian vestibular bundles and how their concentrations change over development.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26401315 PMCID: PMC4570149 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2015.47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Sample and data processing workflow for mass spectrometry analysis of purified mouse utricle hair bundles and utricles.
(a) Paint-fill of the mouse inner ear, with the sensory patches marked (‘utr’, utricle; ‘a’, ampullae of the semicircular canals; ‘sac’, saccule; ‘coch’, cochlea). Adapted from Fig. 1b of ref. 22 with permission. (b) Phalloidin stain (to detect actin) of a ~50×50 μm region of the utricular epithelium (~100 hair cells, out of ~3,000). Hair bundles are seen rising out of the utricular sensory epithelium, which is marked by circumferential actin belts surrounding each cell. (c) Workflow. Four biological replicates each of P5 bundles (BUN), P23 bundles, P5 utricles (UTR), and P23 utricles were prepared. Of the bundle samples,~10% of the protein derived from the utricle; bundles make up <1% of the protein in the utricle sample. Proteins of each of the sixteen samples were separated using short SDS-PAGE runs, and the lanes were cut into six pieces each. Samples were reduced, alkylated, and subjected to trypsin digestion prior to LC-MS/MS. A total of 96 LC-MS/MS runs were carried out in the project. Peptides from each run were identified using MaxQuant; data from the six gel slices per protein were combined back together so the final output represented all peptides detected from the single biological replicate. MaxQuant grouped all proteins that were not distinguished by unique peptides; our additional grouping brought together all proteins that shared at least 20% of their peptides. (d) Purified mouse utricle hair bundles stained with phalloidin to detect actin (magenta) and DAPI to detect nuclei (green). Both bundles and areas of substantial cellular contamination can be seen in the dissecting microscope, and contaminating regions can be cut away from bundles. For the preparation shown, the area that would be excised is indicated by dashed lines. Note that some nuclear contamination would remain (arrows). (e) Protein immunoblot used to estimate contamination in mouse bundle preparations. The indicated number of ear-equivalents of bundles (left) or utricular epithelia (right) were run. The top panel is the India ink stain of the blot after protein transfer; note the bands corresponding to actin and contaminating keratin in the bundles lane. The bottom two panels are protein immunoblots. Even with 15 ears' worth of material, the plasma-membrane marker Na+/K+-ATPase and the intermediate-filament protein vimentin were not detected in the bundle preparation.
Samples analysed for mass spectrometry.
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| P5 BUN | P4-P6 | Mouse utricle hair bundles | 4 | 6 |
| P5 UTR | P4-P6 | Mouse utricles | 4 | 6 |
| P23 BUN | P21-P25 | Mouse utricle hair bundles | 4 | 6 |
| P23 UTR | P21-P25 | Mouse utricles | 4 | 6 |
Histone contamination of hair-bundle samples
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| Only histones or histone groups detected in all 8 bundle and utricle samples at each developmental age were used. | ||||
| ENSMUSP00000045816_family | Family (Histone cluster 1, H1c) | HIST1H1C; HIST1H1A; HIST1H1D; HIST1H1E; HIST1H1T | 0.006 | 0.021 |
| ENSMUSP00000125754_family | Family (H3 histone, family 3A) | H3F3A; H3F3B; HIST1H3A; HIST1H3B; HIST1H3C; HIST1H3D; HIST1H3E; HIST1H3F; HIST1H3G; HIST1H3H; HIST1H3I; HIST2H3B; HIST2H3C1; HIST2H3C2 | 0.069 | 0.224 |
| ENSMUSP00000136357 | Histone cluster 4, H4 | HIST4H4 | 0.043 | 0.257 |
| ENSMUSP00000106095_family | Family (Histone cluster 1, H2bq) | HIST1H2BQ; HIST1H2BA; HIST1H2BB; HIST1H2BC; HIST1H2BE; HIST1H2BF; HIST1H2BG; HIST1H2BH; HIST1H2BJ; HIST1H2BK; HIST1H2BL; HIST1H2BM; HIST1H2BN; HIST1H2BP; HIST1H2BR; HIST2H2BB; HIST2H2BE; HIST3H2BA | 0.040 | 0.199 |
| ENSMUSP00000089336_family | Family (Histone cluster 1, H2ah) | HIST1H2AH; H2AFJ; H2AFX; HIST1H2AA; HIST1H2AB; HIST1H2AC; HIST1H2AD; HIST1H2AE; HIST1H2AF; HIST1H2AG; HIST1H2AI; HIST1H2AK; HIST1H2AL; HIST1H2AN; HIST1H2AO; HIST1H2AP; HIST2H2AA1; HIST2H2AA2; HIST2H2AC; HIST3H2A | 0.008 | 0.080 |
| EENSMUSP00000038221 | H2A histone family member Y | H2AFY | UTR only | 0.030 |
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Figure 2Comparison of the sixteen samples.
(a) Box plots showing riBAQ values for all proteins in the indicated samples. (b) Matrix scatter plot showing pairwise comparisons of proteins detected in each of two samples. Red lines, LOESS smoothing of data. Numbers on the right/upper side of the diagonal are the absolute values of the Pearson’s correlation coefficients. Note the higher correlations for biological replicates (coloured background). (c,d) Principal component analysis of all 16 samples. In (c), PC1 (91% of variance) is plotted against PC2 (5% of variance). In (d), PC2 is plotted against PC3 (2% of variance).
Figure 3Protein expression patterns.
(a) Venn diagram showing numbers of proteins or protein groups identified in bundles and utricle samples. A small number of proteins were only identified in bundle. (b) Distribution of log10 of average protein riBAQ values for utricle samples. Only proteins detected from three or more samples were included. (c) Distribution of riBAQ values for each utricle protein at P5 and P23. Fit is a single Gaussian (peak at +0.2). (d) Distribution of log10 of average protein molecules per stereocilium values for bundle samples. riBAQ values were converted into molecules per stereocilium assuming that riBAQ accurately measured protein fractional abundance and that actin was present at 400,000 molecules per stereocilium[2,9]. Only proteins detected from three or more samples were included. (e) Same as (d) except only proteins with BUN/UTR enrichment of 0.45 or greater were included. (f) Distribution of riBAQ values for each bundle protein at P5 and P23. Fit is a single Gaussian (peak at −0.6). (g) Total iBAQ values as proxy for total protein. Contaminants and reversed entries were removed first. P5 and P23 utricle samples were similar, but there was 1.7-fold more iBAQ signal in the P23 bundle sample as compared to P5.