| Literature DB >> 31408259 |
Nathan Basisty1, Anja Holtz1, Birgit Schilling1.
Abstract
Aging and age-related diseases are accompanied by proteome remodeling and progressive declines in cellular machinery required to maintain protein homeostasis (proteostasis), such as autophagy, ubiquitin-mediated degradation, and protein synthesis. While many studies have focused on capturing changes in proteostasis, the identification of proteins that evade these cellular processes has recently emerged as an approach to studying the aging proteome. With advances in proteomic technology, it is possible to monitor protein half-lives and protein turnover at the level of individual proteins in vivo. For large-scale studies, these technologies typically include the use of stable isotope labeling coupled with MS and comprehensive assessment of protein turnover rates. Protein turnover studies have revealed groups of highly relevant long-lived proteins (LLPs), such as the nuclear pore complexes, extracellular matrix proteins, and protein aggregates. Here, the role of LLPs during aging and age-related diseases and the methods used to identify and quantify their changes are reviewed. The methods available to conduct studies of protein turnover, used in combination with traditional proteomic methods, will enable the field to perform studies in a systems biology context, as changes in proteostasis may not be revealed in studies that solely measure differential protein abundances.Entities:
Keywords: aging; long-lived proteins; mass spectrometry; protein turnover; proteostasis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31408259 PMCID: PMC7015777 DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201800403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomics ISSN: 1615-9853 Impact factor: 3.984
Figure 1Protein turnover workflow. A) The use of heavy‐labeled amino acids generally requires a synthetic diet of a similar composition to regular chow, and it is important to acclimate animals to the non‐labeled synthetic diet for a few weeks prior to the start of the experiment. Mouse treatments, if used, are usually administered prior to supplementation of heavy label. The stable isotope label is typically supplemented in the chow. Tissues from all treatment groups are then collected at several time points, usually on the order of days to weeks, and processed for mass spectrometry analysis. B) For comprehensive survey of protein turnover, samples are analyzed by mass spectrometry using data‐dependent acquisition. An analysis of peptide isotopomer peaks is then conducted using specialized software (e.g., Topograph) to determine the enrichment of label in the precursor pool and the percentage of each protein that is newly synthesized. For each protein, a regression of the fraction that is newly synthesized is then performed to determine its rate of turnover. Figure 1 was adapted and modified based on a schematic of a recent publication under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.24