| Literature DB >> 31721811 |
Signe E Cremer1,2, James L Catalfamo2, Robert Goggs3, Stefan E Seemann4, Annemarie T Kristensen1, Marjory B Brooks2.
Abstract
Domestic dogs share the same environment as humans, and they represent a valuable animal model to study naturally-occurring human disease. Platelet proteomics holds promise for the discovery of biomarkers that capture the contribution of platelets to the pathophysiology of many disease states, however, canine platelet proteomic studies are lacking. Our study objectives were to establish a protocol for proteomic identification and quantification of the thrombin-activated canine platelet secretome (CAPS), and to compare the CAPS proteins to human and murine platelet proteomic data. Washed platelets were isolated from healthy dogs, and stimulated with saline (control) or gamma-thrombin (releasate). Proteins were separated by SDS-page, trypsin-digested and analyzed by liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (MS). CAPS proteins were defined as those with a MS1-abundance ratio of two or more for releasate vs. unstimulated saline control. A total of 1,918 proteins were identified, with 908 proteins common to all dogs and 693 characterized as CAPS proteins. CAPS proteins were similar to human and murine platelet secretomes and were highly represented in hemostatic pathways. Differences unique to CAPS included replacement of platelet factor 4 with other cleavage products of platelet basic protein (e.g. interleukin-8), novel proteins (e.g. C-C motif chemokine 14), and proteins in relatively high (e.g. protease nexin-1) or low (e.g. von Willebrand factor) abundance. This study establishes the first in-depth platelet releasate proteome from healthy dogs with a reference database of 693 CAPS proteins. Similarities between CAPS and the human secretome confirm the utility of dogs as translational models of human disease, but we also identify differences unique to canine platelets. Our findings provide a resource for further investigations into disease-related CAPS profiles, and for comparative pathway analyses of platelet activation among species.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31721811 PMCID: PMC6853320 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental design flow chart.
Platelets were isolated and washed free of plasma by serial centrifugation, divided into two aliquots and activated with saline (control) or gamma-thrombin. The releasate was cleared of debris and then fractionated by ultra-centrifugation into particulate (pellet) and soluble fractions. Proteins were separated by SDS-page, trypsin digested and analyzed by nanoLC-MS/MS.
Fig 2Excision strategy for in-gel digestion.
Regions excised for in-gel digestion are shown for two dogs. Soluble fraction control samples (lanes 1 and 5, respectively), soluble fraction thrombin-stimulated samples (lanes 2 and 6, respectively), pellet fraction control samples (lanes 3 and 7, respectively) and pellet fraction thrombin-stimulated samples (lanes 4 and 8, respectively). The red bars indicate the excised regions used to generate tryptic digests for nano-LC and MS/MS. Molecular weight markers are shown.
Fig 3Venn diagram analysis.
Comparison of all identified canine platelet proteins to the global platelet lysate proteome reported by Burkhart et al. 2012. The diagram shows the number of human lysate proteins shared with the canine secretome (1593), the number of lysate proteins that were not co-identified (2693), and the number of canine proteins that were not reported in the human platelet lysate (325). For the canine proteins, the figure also illustrates the number of proteins in the soluble fraction (647), pellet fraction (447) or both fractions (824).
Significantly enriched GO-annotations for ‘biological process’.
| GO ID | GO Term | Annotated CAPS proteins | |
|---|---|---|---|
| GO:0050817 | Coagulation | 30 | 2.7e-18 |
| GO:0007596 | Blood coagulation | 29 | 3.2e-18 |
| GO:0007599 | Hemostasis | 29 | 5.7e-18 |
| GO:0052547 | Regulation of peptidase activity | 43 | 8.1e-18 |
| GO:0042060 | Wound healing | 39 | 3.5e-17 |
| GO:0010951 | Negative regulation of endopeptidase activity | 32 | 1.4e-16 |
| GO:0006508 | Proteolysis | 100 | 1.6e-16 |
| GO:0052548 | Regulation of endopeptidase activity | 40 | 2.4e-16 |
| GO:0010466 | Negative regulation of peptidase activity | 32 | 3.9e-16 |
| GO:0009611 | Response to wounding | 41 | 6.6e-16 |
| GO:0045861 | Negative regulation of proteolysis | 36 | 3.7e-15 |
| GO:0072376 | Protein activation cascade | 15 | 9.7e-15 |
| GO:0072378 | Blood coagulation, fibrin clot formation | 9 | 4.8e-14 |
| GO:1901564 | Organonitrogen compound metabolic process | 250 | 7.5e-14 |
| GO:0030193 | Regulation of blood coagulation | 18 | 1.1e-13 |
| GO:1900046 | Regulation of hemostasis | 18 | 1.1e-13 |
| GO:0050818 | Regulation of coagulation | 19 | 1.4e-13 |
| GO:0030162 | Regulation of proteolysis | 52 | 6.3e-13 |
| GO:0042730 | Fibrinolysis | 11 | 7.5e-13 |
| GO:0061041 | Regulation of wound healing | 20 | 1.7e-11 |
Fig 4Signal pathway enrichment analysis.
A: Clustergram illustrating the relationship between CAPS proteins (rows) and the 30 most enriched pathways (columns) for the 693 CAPS proteins. Proteins are ranked within a pathway from high to low frequency, and the pathways* are ranked according to the significance-level of enrichment (decreasing enrichment-level left to right). Proteins rarely enriched and unique to individual pathways cluster near the bottom. B: Highlight of the 60 most frequently enriched proteins of the clustergram. Approximately 20 proteins are enriched in the majority of the pathways, but not in the most significantly enriched (pathways 1–4), which share a similar and distinct protein fingerprint. *) Pathways: 1. Platelet activation, signaling and aggregation. 2. Hemostasis. 3. Response to elevated platelet cytosolic Ca++. 4. Platelet degranulation. 5. Innate immune system. 6. Immune system. 7. Signaling by VEGF. 8. VEGFA-VEGFR2 pathway. 9. Metabolism. 10. Axon guidance. 11. Interleukin-3, 5 and GM-CSF signaling. 12. Signaling to ERKs. 13. NGF-signaling via TRKA from the plasma membrane. 14. Signaling by PDGF. 15. IGF1R signaling cascade. 16. IRS-related events triggered by IGF1R. 17. Signaling by Type 1 IGF1R. 18. DAP12 signaling. 19. Signaling to RAS. 20. G2/M transition.21. Adaptive Immune System. 22. Mitotic G2-G2/M phases. 23. IRS-mediated signaling. 24. Signaling by NGF. 25. Signaling by NGF receptor. 26. Insulin-receptor signaling cascade. 27. Downstream signal transduction. 28. C-type lectin receptors (CLRs). 29. Prolonged ERK activation events. 30. Host interactions of HIV factors.
Human secretome proteins not found in dogs.
| Gene name | Protein name |
|---|---|
| Actin, cytoplasmic 1 | |
| Amyloid-like protein 2 | |
| Apolipoprotein A-II | |
| Apolipoprotein A-IV | |
| Apolipoprotein B-100 | |
| Apolipoprotein C-I | |
| Complement component C9 | |
| C-C motif chemokine 5 | |
| Platelet glycoprotein 4 | |
| Complement factor H-related protein 1 | |
| Connective tissue growth factor | |
| Cathepsin W | |
| C-X-C motif chemokine 3 | |
| Dystroglycan | |
| Follistatin-related protein 1 | |
| Platelet glycoprotein V | |
| Heat shock 70 kDa protein 1B | |
| Ig alpha-1 chain C region | |
| Ig gamma-2 chain C region | |
| Ig gamma-3 chain C region | |
| Ig gamma-4 chain C region | |
| Ig mu chain C region | |
| Ig heavy chain V-III region TIL | |
| Ig heavy chain V-III region KOL | |
| Immunoglobulin heavy variable 3–72 | |
| Ig kappa chain C region | |
| Ig kappa chain V-I region EU | |
| Ig kappa chain V-II region TEW | |
| Ig kappa chain V-III region WOL | |
| Ig kappa chain V-IV region Len | |
| Ig lambda-2 chain C regions | |
| Inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain H3 | |
| Galectin-3-binding protein | |
| Interstitial collagenase | |
| Uncharacterized protein | |
| Neurogranin | |
| Nucleobindin-1 | |
| Alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 1 | |
| Alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 2 | |
| Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 6 | |
| Platelet-derived growth factor D | |
| Platelet factor 4 | |
| Platelet factor 4 variant | |
| Sulfhydryl oxidase 1 | |
| Ras-related protein Rab-27B | |
| Ribonuclease T2 | |
| Protein S100-A4 | |
| Syndecan-4 | |
| Serum deprivation-response protein | |
| Plasma protease C1 inhibitor | |
| SPARC | |
| Type 2 lactosamine alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase | |
| Transforming growth factor-beta-induced protein ig-h3 | |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor C |
Inter-species platelet secretome comparisons.
| Canine top 30 | Human top 30 | Murine top 30 |
|---|---|---|
| Thrombospondin-1 | Serum albumin | Serum albumin |
| Thrombospondin-1 | Thrombospondin 1 | |
| Platelet basic protein | Serotransferrin | |
| Fibronectin isoform X7 | Complement C3 | |
| Serum albumin precursor | Filamin-A | Actin, cytoplasmic 1 |
| Gelsolin | Serotransferrin | |
| Platelet basic protein precursor | Myosin-9 | Actin, cytoplasmic 2 |
| Actin, cytoplasmic 2 | ||
| Profilin-1 | Hemoglobin subunit alpha | |
| Metalloproteinase inhibitor 1 isoform X1 | Multimerin-1 | Fibrinogen alpha chain |
| Tubulin beta-4B chain isoform X2 | Hemoglobin subunit beta-1 | |
| Cofilin-1 | Ig mu chain C region (Fragment) | |
| Tubulin alpha-4A chain isoform X1 | Uncharacterized protein | Hemopexin |
| Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase A | Alpha-1-antitrypsin | Beta-2-glycoprotein 1 |
| Gelsolin | ||
| Tubulin beta-1 chain isoform X1 | Complement C3 | |
| Pleckstrin | Alpha-actinin-1 | Serine protease inhibitor A3K |
| Phosphoglycerate kinase 1 | Fibrinogen alpha chain | Plasminogen |
| Nidogen-1 | Latent-transforming GF beta-binding protein 1 | Vitamin D-binding protein |
| Alpha-enolase | Beta-actin-like protein 2 | |
| Apolipoprotein B-100 | Myosin-9 | |
| Fermitin family homolog 3 | Haptoglobin | Platelet basic protein |
| Serotransferrin | Amyloid beta A4 protein | Fibrinogen beta chain |
| Actin, alpha cardiac muscle 1 | Fibrinogen beta chain | Carboxylesterase 1C |
| Tropomyosin alpha-4 chain | Filamin, alpha (Fragment) | |
| Adenylyl cyclase-associated protein 1 isoform X2 | Complement C4-A | Alpha-enolase |
| Transgelin-2 | Vinculin | Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase A |
| Coagulation factor XIII A chain | Platelet glycoprotein V | Lysozyme C-2 |
| Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase | Fibrinogen gamma chain | Murinoglobulin-1 |