| Literature DB >> 33998547 |
Connor Seeley1, Kimberly B Kegel-Gleason1.
Abstract
Mass spectrometry (MS) is a physical technique used to identify specific chemicals and molecules by precise analysis of their mass and charge; this technology has been adapted for biological sciences applications. Investigators have used MS to identify differential expressions of proteins in Huntington's disease (HD), to discover Huntingtin (HTT) interacting proteins and to analyze HTT proteoforms. Using systems biology and computational approaches, data from MS screens have been leveraged to find differentially expressed pathways. This review summarizes the data from most of the MS studies done in the HD field in the last 20 years and compares it to the protein data reported before the use of MS technology. The MS results validate early findings in the field such as differential expression of PDE10a and DARPP-32 and identify new changes. We offer a perspective on the MS approach in HD, particularly for identification of disease pathways, the challenges in interpreting data across different studies, and its application to protein studies moving forward.Entities:
Keywords: HTT; Huntingtin; Huntington’s disease; interactome; mass spectrometry; proteome; proteomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33998547 PMCID: PMC8293646 DOI: 10.3233/JHD-200465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Huntingtons Dis ISSN: 1879-6397
Proteomic changes identified in HD cell and animal models measured using mass spectrometry
| Paper | Model & age | Tissue preparation | Detection methods | # of proteins “significant” | Differentially expressed pathways. (Top pathways most significant) |
| Agrawal et al. 2019 [ | - R6/2 (Exon1 of human HTT < 150Q), transgenic mice, 12 weeks | Flash frozen < 5 min after dissection, Cerebral cortical Mitochondrial preparations | 2D SDS-PAGE MALDI-TOF/ TOF MS | 17/386 differentially expressed proteins in R6/2 | N/A |
| -YAC128 (full length human HTT ∼128 polyQ), transgenic mice,15 months | 12/306 differentially expressed protein in YAC128 | ||||
| Chodhurry et al. 2016 [ | STHdhQ111/Q111 StHdh Q7/Q7 | “Post acetone precipitation” | 2D SDS-PAGE MALDI TOF/TOF MS | 31 proteins – differentially expressed by 2D DIGE | Neuron apoptosis |
| Response to superoxide | |||||
| 2D-DIGE | |||||
| Deschepper et al. 2012 [ | - Hdhq150 (129SvEv/CD1 crossed with C57BL/6J), knock-in mice, 15 and 18 months - Hdhq92 (129SvEv/CD1 crossed with C57BL/6J), knock-in mice, 10, 12 &18 months | Snap frozen: Striatum, Cortex, Hippocampus and Cerebellum | SELDI TOF->MALDI TOF/TO | ||
| Hosp et al. 2017 [ | R6/2 (Exon1 of human HTT < 150Q), transgenic mice, 5, 8, &12 weeks | Soluble and insoluble proteome separated from: Striatum, Cortex, Hippocampus and Cerebellum | LC-MS/MS | ||
| Neuron projection | |||||
| Associated with oxidative phosphorylation | |||||
| Langfelder et al. 2016 [ | Hdh Q175 6 month | Total striatum | LC -MS/MS (MaxLFQ) | 1370 Proteins | N/A (Higher order Networks of RNA data only); see Sapp et al., 2020 [ |
| Liu et al. 2007 [ | R6/2 (B6CBA-TgN Hdexon1 | Flash frozen striatum and cortex | LC-MS/MS | N/A | |
| Wt littermate controls | |||||
| McQuade et al. 2014 [ | Human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and neurons, NON- isogenic | Lysed using various methods for different cell types | LC MS/MS | Human ESC: 61 upregulated proteins | |
| Genea 017 (Q12/Q40) | Neuro differentiated cells | 225 down regulated proteins | |||
| Genea018 (Q17/Q46) | Human Neuro differentiated Cells:136 differentially expressed (I could go through and count how many up and down) | ||||
| Genea020 (Q17/Q48) | |||||
| Genea046 (Q23/Q45) | |||||
| Genea089 (Q19/Q41) | |||||
| Genea090 (Q19/Q46) | |||||
| Genea091 (Q21/Q42) | |||||
| Ratovitski et al. 2016 [ | Human Brain- superior frontal gyrus | Homogenized in non-ionic buffer | iTRaq | 1211 proteins changed | |
| 12 control | LC-MS/MS | Signaling by Rho family GTPases | |||
| 12 HD | Rho GDI signaling | ||||
| Actin cytoskeleton signaling | |||||
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | |||||
| RhoA signaling | |||||
| Also, Ephirin B signaling, integrin signaling, endocytosis, axonal guidance, PKA signaling, DNA/RNA processing, and protein transport | |||||
| Skotte et al. 2017 [ | R6/2 (Exon1 of human HTT < 150Q), transgenic mice, 12 weeks | Microdissection: fresh tissue Striatum, cortex, hippocampus, midbrain | LC -MS/MS | 750 increase in HD | |
| 764 decreased in HD | Synapse function and neurotransmitter homeostasis | ||||
| Divalent metal ion transport | |||||
| Extracellular vesicular exosome | |||||
| Glutamate signaling pathway | |||||
| Sorolla et al. 2008 [ | Post-mortem Human brain | Frozen on dry ice postmortem delay from 3 -15.2hrs | 2D SDS Page | 11 proteins | N/A – no pathway analysis complete |
| MALDI TOF | GFAP (str), tubulin 1chain (str &cor), Peroxiredoxin 1 (cor), (Peroxiredoxin 6 (str), glutathione peroxidase 1 (str &cor), Glutathione peroxidase 6(str&cor), ∝-crystalin B-Chain (cor), Fructose bisphosphate aldolase C neural (cor), Ferritin light chain (cor), aconitase (str) | ||||
| Sapp et al. 2020 [ | Q140/Q7 mouse, knock-in 2 &6 months | Synaptosomes from Striatum &Cortex | LC MS/MS | ||
| Striatum, 6 months, 97 proteins | Parkinson’s disease | ||||
| Striatum, 2 months, 7 proteins | Huntington’s disease | ||||
| Cortex, 6 months 4, proteins | Oxidative phosphorylation | ||||
| Cortex, 2 months 8, proteins | Alzheimer’s disease | ||||
| Non-alcoholic fatty acid liver disease | |||||
| Others, Citrate cycle, Pyruvate metabolism | |||||
| Calcium signaling pathway | |||||
| Amphetamine addiction | |||||
| Rap1 signaling pathway | |||||
| Aldosterone synthesis and secretion | |||||
| Cholinergic synapse | |||||
| Zabel et al. 2002 [ | R6/2 (Exon1 of Human HTT > 150Q), cba×cb7bl/6 controls transgenic,4, 8, &12 week | specific fractionation for improving 2d gel resolution | 2D large gel electrophoresis ->MALDI TOF MS | Close to Terminal Disease R6/2 Brains Show Exhaustion or Reduced Expression of | N/A |
| HD IPSC consortium 2017 [ | Neuronal stem cells Q33, Q60, Q109 control and HD IPSCs | Total cell lysates | LC MS/MS | 356 upregulated | Cell cycle, Axonal guidance, Neuronal development 2 more?? |
| 191 down regulated | Connective tissue disorders, genetic disorder, dermatological disease and conditions | ||||
| Cellular growth and proliferation, Cellular assembly and organization, cellular function and maintenance |
2D, 2 dimensional; DIGE, differential gel electrophoresis; HTT, Huntingtin; HD, Huntington’s disease; IPA, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis, KEGG, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes; LC, liquid chromatography; MALDI, matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization: MaxLFQ, label-free quantification by delayed normalization and maximal peptide ratio extraction; MS, mass spectrometry; N/A, not available; SELDI, surface enhanced laser desorption/ionization; TOF, time of flight.
Proteomic changes identified between control and HD patient cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) identified by mass spectrometry
| Paper | Cohort size and disease status (as reported in publication) | Average age and CAG repeats | Detection methods | # of proteins “significant” | Implicated functions |
| Fang et al. 2009 [ | 10 controls | 1D &2D gel, LC Ion trap | Neurodegeneration Microgliosis Astrogliosis | ||
| 10 HD gene-positive Early stage | Instruments: HCT-Ultra, LTQ-FT, LTQ OrbiTrap XL | ||||
| 10 HD gene-positive Midstage | Data obtained and compiled across 5 laboratories each using different methods | ||||
| Huang et al. 2011 [ | 6 Controls | Controls: 45.863.0 (26– 64) y | 2D SDS-PAGE MALDI-TOF MS/MS | Upregulated in HD: prothrombin, Apo A-IV (APOA4), and haptoglobin | Inflammation |
| 6 HD patients | HD: 43.463.4 (25– 57) y | Hypothalamic activity | |||
| Average CAG repeats: 46.162.3 (41– 62) | Antioxidant activity | ||||
| Niemela et al. 2020 [ | 38 Controls | N/A | NanoLC-MS/MS | Upregulated in HD: 26 proteins | |
| 13 HD preManifest | After depletion of over-abundant proteins | Downregulated in HD: 12 downregulated | Clathrin-mediated endocytosis signaling | ||
| 12 HD manifest | LXR/RXR activation | ||||
| FXR/RXR activation | |||||
| Atherosclerosis signaling | |||||
| Coagulation system |
Huntington associated proteins identified by mass spectrometry
| Paper | Species/model | Tissue preparation | Isolation method | Detection methods | # of differentially interacting proteins | Pathway analysis of differentially interacting protein |
| Culver et al. 2012 [ | FQ7Q7 vs FQ140/Q7 knock-in mice, postnatal day 15 | Fresh brain lysates, Post nuclear supernatant | FLAG tagged M2 antibody | LC- MS/MS | N/A | |
| Translational initiation (14 fold enrich.) | ||||||
| Ribosomal (18 fold enrich.) | ||||||
| RNA binding (12 fold enrichment) | ||||||
| Nucleic acid binding | ||||||
| Cytoskeletal regulation by rho GTPase | ||||||
| Kaltenbach et al. 2007 [ | Human brain Mouse brain Human cells: HEK 293, M17 neuroblastoma, HeLa | Co-affinity purification using GST-HTT N terminal fragments incubated with brain tissue and cell lysates | (GST-HTT N terminal fragments) affinity pulldown | MALDI MS/MS | 145 proteins | |
| Mitochondrial energy metabolism | ||||||
| Vesicle trafficking | ||||||
| Axonal transport | ||||||
| Ubiquitin mediated proteolysis | ||||||
| Synapse | ||||||
| Ratovitski et al. 2012 [ | Human stem cells, transgenic cells Q20/Q20 vs Q50/Q50 | Purification of HTT complexes using “interplay mammalian TAP system kit” | 586 aa HTT fragment generated by caspase 6 (N586) | LC MS/MS | 349 proteins | |
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | ||||||
| Oxidative phosphorylation | ||||||
| Purine metabolism | ||||||
| Estrogen receptor signaling | ||||||
| Regulation of eIF4 and p7056K signaling | ||||||
| Shirasaki et al. 2012 [ | BACHD 97Q, full-length human HTT transgenic mice 2 &12 week | Fresh brain lysates | Immunoprecipitation using monoclonal antibody clone: (HDB4E10) | Nano LC-MS/MS | 747 HTT associating proteins analyzed | |
| 14-3-3 signaling | ||||||
| Mitochondrial dysfunction | ||||||
| Axonal guidance | ||||||
| Oxidative phosphorylation | ||||||
| IL-1 signaling | ||||||
| Protein Kinase A signaling | ||||||
| Creb Signaling in Neurons | ||||||
| Weighted Gene Correlation Network Analysis (WGCNA) | ||||||
| Yao et al. 2014 [ | Wild-type mouse Black 6 background: Mouse brain | Synaptosomes | Reversible crosslinking followed by Affinity purification using Mab2166 | LC -MS | Identified presynaptic binding partners: Basson, Piccolo/Aczonin and Ahnak |
*Yao et al is a study classifying Htt interaction in WT mice. GO, gene ontology; HTT or Htt, Huntingtin (as reported in original paper); HD, Huntington’s disease; IPA, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis, KEGG, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes; LC, liquid chromatography; MALDI, matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization; MS, mass spectrometry; N/A, not available; Q, glutamine; TOF, time of flight.
Mass spectrometry analysis of HTT post translational modifications
| Paper | Model | Tissue preparation | Detection methods | Major findings |
| Jeong et al. 2009 [ | Transfected Cos-7 cells with aa1–480 of HTT, 68Q | HTT 480-68Q Immunoprecipitated from Cos-7 cells using anti-HTT MAb5492 | Tandem MS -> LC MS/MS | Mutant HTT is acylated at K444 -> confirmed via western blot |
| Ratovitski et al. 2012 [ | - Neuronal progenitor cells STHdh transfected w/ full length HTT | HTT Immunoprecipitation and subcellular fractionation | Tandem Mass spectrometry MS/MS | Novel lysine acetylation sites 23 PTM site in human brain tissue |
| - Human brain | ||||
| Schilling et al. 2006 [ | 293T and PC12 cells transfected w/ myc-tagged full length HTT with Q23 &Q148 | Post-nuclear supernatant | MALDI MS peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) and nano-HPLC-ESI-MS, MS/MS) | Identification of phosphorylation sites (6 novel) in HTT: |
| MALDI MS/MS with on-target phosphatase and protease treatment | aa421, aa533/5/6, aa1181, aa1201, aa2076, aa2653, aa2657 | |||
| Thompson et al. 2009 [ | ST14A transfected w/ | Post-nuclear supernatant | LC MS/MS | S13 and S16 can be phosphorylated Acetylation at K9 |
| -Htt25Qp-HBH+IKK-aby | ||||
| -Htt25Qp-HBH + CBP + IKK-b (Exon1 of Human HTT with C-terminal HBH tag) |
Fig. 1Determining peptide composition using mass references values. This graph shows an example mass spectrum with intensity graphed on the y-axis and Mass/Charge (m/z) ratio graphed on the x-axis. In this case the first 3 amino acids of the HTT protein, methionine, alanine, and threonine are deducted from the graph by determining the change in mass between each peak and referring to Table 1. Charted here is the first three amino acids of the HTT peptide (MATLEKLMKA . . .).
The reference values for mass of the twenty amino acids with their abbreviations and chemical formulas
| Amino acid | 3-letter code | Residue mass | Formula |
| Alanine | Ala | 71.03711 | C3H5NO |
| Arginine | Arg | 156.10111 | C6H12N4O |
| Asparagine | Asn | 114.04293 | C4H6N2O2 |
| Aspartic acid | Asp | 115.02694 | C4H5NO3 |
| Cysteine | Cys | 103.00919 | C3H5NOS |
| Glutamic acid | Glu | 129.04259 | C5H7NO3 |
| Glutamine | Gln | 128.05858 | C5H8N2O2 |
| Glycine | Gly | 57.0146 | C2H3NO |
| Histadine | His | 137.05891 | C6H7N3O |
| Isoleucine | Ile | 113.05891 | C6H11NO |
| Leucine | Leu | 113.08406 | C6H11NO |
| Lysine | Lys | 128.09496 | C6H12N2O |
| Methionine | Met | 131.04049 | C5H9NOS |
| Phenylalanine | Phe | 147.06841 | C9H9NO |
| Proline | Pro | 97.05276 | C5H7NO |
| Serine | Ser | 87.03203 | C3H5N2O |
| Threonine | Thr | 101.04768 | C4H7N2O |
| Trytophan | Trp | 186.07931 | C11H10N2O |
| Tyrosine | Tyr | 163.06333 | C9H9NO2 |
| Valine | Val | 99.06841 | C5H9NO |
Fig. 2A) Crude schematic of a MALDI TOF MS set up with the three essential components; Ion source, mass analyzer (electric or magnetic field) and a detector. For MALDI the sample is on a solid support. B) Crude schematic of the Ionization chamber of an ESI mass spectrometer. The sample enters the chamber as a liquid through a capillary. The sample is then aerosolized by the high voltage. Note the charge can be manipulated to select for either positive or negatively charged ions which are sent to mass analyzer and detector as in A.
Fig. 3General workflow for mass spectrometry analysis of proteins.