| Literature DB >> 32731645 |
Rikke Kruse1,2, Navid Sahebekhtiari1,2, Kurt Højlund1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Mitochondria are essential in energy metabolism and cellular survival, and there is growing evidence that insulin resistance in chronic metabolic disorders, such as obesity, type 2 diabetes (T2D), and aging, is linked to mitochondrial dysfunction in skeletal muscle. Protein profiling by proteomics is a powerful tool to investigate mechanisms underlying complex disorders. However, despite significant advances in proteomics within the past two decades, the technologies have not yet been fully exploited in the field of skeletal muscle proteome. Area covered: Here, we review the currently available studies characterizing the mitochondrial proteome in human skeletal muscle in insulin-resistant conditions, such as obesity, T2D, and aging, as well as exercise-mediated changes in the mitochondrial proteome. Furthermore, we outline technical challenges and limitations and methodological aspects that should be considered when planning future large-scale proteomics studies of mitochondria from human skeletal muscle. Authors' view: At present, most proteomic studies of skeletal muscle or isolated muscle mitochondria have demonstrated a reduced abundance of proteins in several mitochondrial biological processes in obesity, T2D, and aging, whereas the beneficial effects of exercise involve an increased content of muscle proteins involved in mitochondrial metabolism. Powerful mass-spectrometry-based proteomics now provides unprecedented opportunities to perform in-depth proteomics of muscle mitochondria, which in the near future is expected to increase our understanding of the complex molecular mechanisms underlying the link between mitochondrial dysfunction and insulin resistance in chronic metabolic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Type 2 diabetes; insulin resistance; mitochondria; mitochondrial proteomics; skeletal muscle
Year: 2020 PMID: 32731645 PMCID: PMC7432338 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21155374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Advantages and limitations of MS-based proteomics using either data-dependent acquisition (DDA), data-independent acquisition (DIA), or the targeted approach called selected reaction monitoring (SRM). SRM requires prior identification of peptides and therefore currently has the hardest instrument setup, while DDA offers the easiest and is the default mode of use on most mass spectrometers. On the other hand, SRM offers the highest reproducibility and is the most sensitive method regarding peptide quantification because of a high signal-to-noise ratio. DIA is almost comparable to SRM with respect to the reproducibility and precision of quantification but is more vulnerable to variation caused by interference from other peptides. While DDA shows the least optimal performance regarding the reproducibility and precision of peptide identification and quantification, it is currently the method of choice for most discovery proteomics studies due to the high depth of peptide identification and easy data analysis.
Figure 2The number of proteins identified using discovery-mode proteomics on whole-muscle samples and isolated mitochondria from human skeletal muscle. The black part of the bars shows the number of non-mitochondrial proteins, while the white part represents the number of mitochondrial proteins identified in the respective studies identified by the first author, year of publication, and instrumental setup.
Figure 3Altered mitochondrial proteome in skeletal muscle in obesity, T2D, and aging. The pie charts show the total number of protein spots or proteins quantified in whole muscle or the total number of mitochondrial proteins quantified in isolated mitochondria (top), and the number of regulated non-mitochondrial (blue) proteins and downregulated (red) or upregulated (green) mitochondrial proteins identified in relation to obesity, T2D, or aging in proteomic studies of human skeletal muscle (whole muscle or isolated mitochondria) published (first author, year of publication). The pie charts in the box with dotted lines represent a study of both intermyofibrillar (IMF) and subsarcolemmal (SS) muscle mitochondria. N/A, not available.