| Literature DB >> 28250382 |
Yong-Chul Kim1, Michal Barshishat-Kupper2, Elizabeth A McCart3, Gregory P Mueller4, Regina M Day5.
Abstract
The bone marrow is one of the most radio-sensitive tissues. Accidental ionizing radiation exposure can damage mature blood cells and hematopoietic progenitor/stem cells, and mortality can result from hematopoietic insufficiency and infection. Ionizing radiation induces alterations in gene and protein expression in hematopoietic tissue. Here we investigated radiation effects on protein carbonylation, a primary marker for protein oxidative damage. C57BL/6 mice were either sham irradiated or exposed to 7.5 Gy 60Co (0.6 Gy/min) total body irradiation. Bone marrow was obtained 24 h post-irradiation. Two dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis and Oxyblot immunodetection were used to discover carbonylated proteins, and peptide mass fingerprinting was performed for identification. 2D gels allowed the detection of 13 carbonylated proteins in the bone marrow; seven of these were identified, with two pairs of the same protein. Baseline levels of carbonylation were found in 78 kDa glucose-related protein, heat shock protein cognate 71 KDa, actin, chitinase-like protein 3 (CHI3L1), and carbonic anhydrase 2 (CAII). Radiation increased carbonylation in four proteins, including CHI3L1 and CAII, and induced carbonylation of one additional protein (not identified). Our findings indicate that the profile of specific protein carbonylation in bone marrow is substantially altered by ionizing radiation. Accordingly, protein oxidation may be a mechanism for reduced cell viability.Entities:
Keywords: acute radiation syndrome; protein carbonylation; proteomic analysis
Year: 2014 PMID: 28250382 PMCID: PMC5302751 DOI: 10.3390/proteomes2030291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomes ISSN: 2227-7382
Figure 1Two dimensional gel electrophoresis and Oxtblot analysis of sham-irradiated and irradiated bone marrow proteins. C57BL/6 mice were either sham irradiated (control) or exposed to 7.5 Gy TBI. Bone marrow cell lysates were obtained 24 h postirradiation, and protein lysates were combined from 3 mice for one gel. Upper panels: Oxyblot. Lower panels: Coomassie stained gels. Proteins detected by Oxyblot are indicated with numbered arrows. Immunoblots and gels are representative.
Carbonylated proteins were identified by peptide mass finger printing. Numbers correspond to spot numbers identified in 2-D gels of control and irradiated bone marrow proteins (Figure 1). Symbols −, +, ++, +++ indicate relative levels of protein carbonylation in control vs. total body irradiation (7.5 Gy).
| Spot No. | Protein ID | # Peptides | % Coverage | Control | Radiation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 78 kDa glucose-regulated protein (GRP78) | 22 | 37.5 | + | − |
| 2 | Heat shock cognate 71 kDa protein (HSC71) | 19 | 38.9 | ++ | − |
| 3 | Heat shock cognate 71 kDa protein (HSC71) | 29 | 52.5 | ++ | − |
| 6 | Chitinase-like protein 3 (CHI3L1 or YKL-40) | 19 | 53.8 | + | ++ |
| 7 | Actin, cytoplasmic | 15 | 49.6 | + | + |
| 8 | Actin, cytoplasmic | 10 | 29.3 | + | + |
| 10 | Carbonic anhydrase 2 (CAII) | 12 | 67.7 | + | +++ |