| Literature DB >> 34499502 |
Elizabeth F Bayne1, Aaron D Simmons2, David S Roberts1, Yanlong Zhu3,4, Timothy J Aballo3,5, Benjamin Wancewicz3, Sean P Palecek2, Ying Ge1,3,4.
Abstract
Human pluripotent stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hPSC-CMs) show immense promise for patient-specific disease modeling, cardiotoxicity screening, and regenerative therapy development. However, thus far, hPSC-CMs in culture have not recapitulated the structural or functional properties of adult CMs in vivo. To gain global insight into hPSC-CM biology, we established a multiomics method for analyzing the hPSC-CM metabolome and proteome from the same cell culture, creating multidimensional profiles of hPSC-CMs. Specifically, we developed a sequential extraction to capture metabolites and proteins from the same hPSC-CM monolayer cultures and analyzed these extracts using high-resolution mass spectrometry. Using this method, we annotated 205 metabolites/lipids and 4319 proteins from 106 cells with high reproducibility. We further integrated the proteome and metabolome measurements to create network profiles of molecular phenotypes for hPSC-CMs. Out of 310 pathways identified using metabolomics and proteomics, 40 pathways were considered significantly overrepresented (false-discovery-rate-corrected p ≤ 0.05). Highly populated pathways included those involved in protein synthesis (ribosome, spliceosome), ATP generation (oxidative phosphorylation), and cardiac muscle contraction. This multiomics method achieves a deep coverage of metabolites and proteins, creating a multidimensional view of the hPSC-CM phenotype, which provides a strong technological foundation to advance the understanding of hPSC-CM biology. Raw data are available in the MassIVE repository with identifier MSV000088010.Entities:
Keywords: FTICR MS; Multiomics; bottom-up proteomics; cell culture extraction; stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes; timsTOF Pro; untargeted metabolomics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34499502 PMCID: PMC8714023 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Proteome Res ISSN: 1535-3893 Impact factor: 5.370