Literature DB >> 30993355

Selective protein enrichment in calcium oxalate stone matrix: a window to pathogenesis?

Jeffrey A Wesson1,2, Ann M Kolbach-Mandel3, Brian R Hoffmann4,5, Carley Davis6, Neil S Mandel3,7.   

Abstract

Urine proteins are thought to control calcium oxalate stone formation, but over 1000 proteins have been reported in stone matrix obscuring their relative importance. Proteins critical to stone formation should be present at increased relative abundance in stone matrix compared to urine, so quantitative protein distribution data were obtained for stone matrix compared to prior urine proteome data. Matrix proteins were isolated from eight stones (> 90% calcium oxalate content) by crystal dissolution and further purified by ultradiafiltration (> 10 kDa membrane). Proteomic analyses were performed using label-free spectral counting tandem mass spectrometry, followed by stringent filtering. The average matrix proteome was compared to the average urine proteome observed in random urine samples from 25 calcium oxalate stone formers reported previously. Five proteins were prominently enriched in matrix, accounting for a mass fraction of > 30% of matrix protein, but only 3% of urine protein. Many highly abundant urinary proteins, like albumin and uromodulin, were present in matrix at reduced relative abundance compared to urine, likely indicating non-selective inclusion in matrix. Furthermore, grouping proteins by isoelectric point demonstrated that the stone matrix proteome was highly enriched in both strongly anionic (i.e., osteopontin) and strongly cationic (i.e., histone) proteins, most of which are normally found in intracellular or nuclear compartments. The fact that highly anionic and highly cationic proteins aggregate at low concentrations and these aggregates can induce crystal aggregation suggests that protein aggregation may facilitate calcium oxalate stone formation, while cell injury processes are implicated by the presence of many intracellular proteins.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Calcium oxalate; Kidney calculi; Nephrolithiasis; Urine proteome

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30993355     DOI: 10.1007/s00240-019-01131-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Urolithiasis        ISSN: 2194-7228            Impact factor:   3.436


  27 in total

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4.  Exploring mechanisms of protein influence on calcium oxalate kidney stone formation.

Authors:  Garrett K Berger; Jessica Eisenhauer; Andrew Vallejos; Brian Hoffmann; Jeffrey A Wesson
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Authors:  Qing Wang; Yi Sun; Yuanyuan Yang; Cong Li; Jiaqiao Zhang; Shaogang Wang
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7.  Protein primary structure correlates with calcium oxalate stone matrix preference.

Authors:  Yu Tian; Matthew Tirrell; Carley Davis; Jeffrey A Wesson
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