Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.

Aspergillosis is a fungal disease due to Aspergillus molds that can affect both humans and animals. As routine diagnosis remains difficult, improvement of basic knowledge with respect to its pathophysiology is critical to search for new biomarkers of infection and new therapeutic targets. Large-scal...

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Main Authors: Guillaume Desoubeaux, David Chauvin, Maria Del Carmen Piqueras, Ellen Bronson, Sanjoy K Bhattacharya, Gayle Sirpenski, Eric Bailly, Carolyn Cray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6057647?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9990c86d9fbe41fa8d8351ff226d8a642020-11-25T00:42:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01137e020084310.1371/journal.pone.0200843Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.Guillaume DesoubeauxDavid ChauvinMaria Del Carmen PiquerasEllen BronsonSanjoy K BhattacharyaGayle SirpenskiEric BaillyCarolyn CrayAspergillosis is a fungal disease due to Aspergillus molds that can affect both humans and animals. As routine diagnosis remains difficult, improvement of basic knowledge with respect to its pathophysiology is critical to search for new biomarkers of infection and new therapeutic targets. Large-scale proteomics allows assessment of protein changes during various disease processes. In the present study, mass spectrometry iTRAQ® (isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation) protocol was used for direct identification and relative quantitation of host proteins in diseased fluids and tissues collected from an experimental rat model challenged with Aspergillus, as well as in blood obtained from naturally-infected penguins. In all, mass spectrometry analysis revealed that proteome during aspergillosis was mostly represented by proteins that usually express role in metabolic processes and biological process regulation. Ten and 17 proteins were significantly ≥4.0-fold overrepresented in blood of Aspergillus-diseased rats and penguins, respectively, while five and 39 were negatively ≥4.0-fold depleted within the same samples. In rat lungs, 33 proteins were identified with positive or negative relative changes versus controls and were quite different from those identified in the blood. Except for some zinc finger proteins, kinases, and histone transferases, and while three pathways were common (Wnt, cadherin and FGF), great inter-species variabilities were observed regarding the identity of the differentially-represented proteins. Thus, this finding confirmed how difficult it is to define a unique biomarker of infection. iTRAQ® protocol appears as a convenient proteomic tool that is greatly suited to ex vivo exploratory studies and should be considered as preliminary step before validation of new diagnostic markers and new therapeutic targets in humans.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6057647?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guillaume Desoubeaux
David Chauvin
Maria Del Carmen Piqueras
Ellen Bronson
Sanjoy K Bhattacharya
Gayle Sirpenski
Eric Bailly
Carolyn Cray
spellingShingle Guillaume Desoubeaux
David Chauvin
Maria Del Carmen Piqueras
Ellen Bronson
Sanjoy K Bhattacharya
Gayle Sirpenski
Eric Bailly
Carolyn Cray
Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Guillaume Desoubeaux
David Chauvin
Maria Del Carmen Piqueras
Ellen Bronson
Sanjoy K Bhattacharya
Gayle Sirpenski
Eric Bailly
Carolyn Cray
author_sort Guillaume Desoubeaux
title Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
title_short Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
title_full Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
title_fullStr Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
title_full_unstemmed Translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
title_sort translational proteomic study to address host protein changes during aspergillosis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Aspergillosis is a fungal disease due to Aspergillus molds that can affect both humans and animals. As routine diagnosis remains difficult, improvement of basic knowledge with respect to its pathophysiology is critical to search for new biomarkers of infection and new therapeutic targets. Large-scale proteomics allows assessment of protein changes during various disease processes. In the present study, mass spectrometry iTRAQ® (isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation) protocol was used for direct identification and relative quantitation of host proteins in diseased fluids and tissues collected from an experimental rat model challenged with Aspergillus, as well as in blood obtained from naturally-infected penguins. In all, mass spectrometry analysis revealed that proteome during aspergillosis was mostly represented by proteins that usually express role in metabolic processes and biological process regulation. Ten and 17 proteins were significantly ≥4.0-fold overrepresented in blood of Aspergillus-diseased rats and penguins, respectively, while five and 39 were negatively ≥4.0-fold depleted within the same samples. In rat lungs, 33 proteins were identified with positive or negative relative changes versus controls and were quite different from those identified in the blood. Except for some zinc finger proteins, kinases, and histone transferases, and while three pathways were common (Wnt, cadherin and FGF), great inter-species variabilities were observed regarding the identity of the differentially-represented proteins. Thus, this finding confirmed how difficult it is to define a unique biomarker of infection. iTRAQ® protocol appears as a convenient proteomic tool that is greatly suited to ex vivo exploratory studies and should be considered as preliminary step before validation of new diagnostic markers and new therapeutic targets in humans.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6057647?pdf=render
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