14 results on '"Kliuchnikova AA"'
Search Results
2. RNA Editing by ADAR Adenosine Deaminases in the Cell Models of CAG Repeat Expansion Diseases: Significant Effect of Differentiation from Stem Cells into Brain Organoids in the Absence of Substantial Influence of CAG Repeats on the Level of Editing.
- Author
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Kudriavskii VV, Goncharov AO, Eremeev AV, Ruchko ES, Veselovsky VA, Klimina KM, Bogomazova AN, Lagarkova MA, Moshkovskii SA, and Kliuchnikova AA
- Subjects
- Humans, Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Adenosine Deaminase genetics, RNA Editing, Organoids metabolism, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells metabolism, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells cytology, Cell Differentiation, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, RNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Brain metabolism, Huntington Disease genetics, Huntington Disease metabolism, Huntington Disease pathology
- Abstract
Expansion of CAG repeats in certain genes is a known cause of several neurodegenerative diseases, but exact mechanism behind this is not yet fully understood. It is believed that the double-stranded RNA regions formed by CAG repeats could be harmful to the cell. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that these RNA regions might potentially interfere with ADAR RNA editing enzymes, leading to the reduced A-to-I editing of RNA and activation of the interferon response. We studied induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from the patients with Huntington's disease or ataxia type 17, as well as midbrain organoids developed from these cells. A targeted panel for next-generation sequencing was used to assess editing in the specific RNA regions. Differentiation of iPSCs into brain organoids led to increase in the ADAR2 gene expression and decrease in the expression of protein inhibitors of RNA editing. As a result, there was increase in the editing of specific ADAR2 substrates, which allowed identification of differential substrates of ADAR isoforms. However, comparison of the pathology and control groups did not show differences in the editing levels among the iPSCs. Additionally, brain organoids with 42-46 CAG repeats did not exhibit global changes. On the other hand, brain organoids with the highest number of CAG repeats in the huntingtin gene (76) showed significant decrease in the level of RNA editing of specific transcripts, potentially involving ADAR1. Notably, editing of the long non-coding RNA PWAR5 was nearly absent in this sample. It could be stated in conclusion that in most cultures with repeat expansion, the hypothesized effect on RNA editing was not confirmed.
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- 2024
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3. Massive Proteogenomic Reanalysis of Publicly Available Proteomic Datasets of Human Tissues in Search for Protein Recoding via Adenosine-to-Inosine RNA Editing.
- Author
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Levitsky LI, Ivanov MV, Goncharov AO, Kliuchnikova AA, Bubis JA, Lobas AA, Solovyeva EM, Pyatnitskiy MA, Ovchinnikov RK, Kukharsky MS, Farafonova TE, Novikova SE, Zgoda VG, Tarasova IA, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Humans, Animals, Mice, RNA metabolism, RNA Editing, Chromatography, Liquid, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Proteome genetics, Proteome metabolism, Adenosine metabolism, Inosine genetics, Inosine metabolism, Proteomics, Proteogenomics
- Abstract
The proteogenomic search pipeline developed in this work has been applied for reanalysis of 40 publicly available shotgun proteomic datasets from various human tissues comprising more than 8000 individual LC-MS/MS runs, of which 5442 .raw data files were processed in total. This reanalysis was focused on searching for ADAR-mediated RNA editing events, their clustering across samples of different origins, and classification. In total, 33 recoded protein sites were identified in 21 datasets. Of those, 18 sites were detected in at least two datasets, representing the core human protein editome. In agreement with prior artworks, neural and cancer tissues were found to be enriched with recoded proteins. Quantitative analysis indicated that recoding the rate of specific sites did not directly depend on the levels of ADAR enzymes or targeted proteins themselves, rather it was governed by differential and yet undescribed regulation of interaction of enzymes with mRNA. Nine recoding sites conservative between humans and rodents were validated by targeted proteomics using stable isotope standards in the murine brain cortex and cerebellum, and an additional one was validated in human cerebrospinal fluid. In addition to previous data of the same type from cancer proteomes, we provide a comprehensive catalog of recoding events caused by ADAR RNA editing in the human proteome.
- Published
- 2023
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4. Blood Plasma Proteome: A Meta-Analysis of the Results of Protein Quantification in Human Blood by Targeted Mass Spectrometry.
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Kliuchnikova AA, Novikova SE, Ilgisonis EV, Kiseleva OI, Poverennaya EV, Zgoda VG, Moshkovskii SA, Poroikov VV, Lisitsa AV, Archakov AI, and Ponomarenko EA
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- Humans, Ceruloplasmin metabolism, Mass Spectrometry methods, Proteomics, Blood Proteins metabolism, Plasma metabolism, Proteome
- Abstract
A meta-analysis of the results of targeted quantitative screening of human blood plasma was performed to generate a reference standard kit that can be used for health analytics. The panel included 53 of the 296 proteins that form a “stable” part of the proteome of a healthy individual; these proteins were found in at least 70% of samples and were characterized by an interindividual coefficient of variation <40%. The concentration range of the selected proteins was 10−10−10−3 M and enrichment analysis revealed their association with rare familial diseases. The concentration of ceruloplasmin was reduced by approximately three orders of magnitude in patients with neurological disorders compared to healthy volunteers, and those of gelsolin isoform 1 and complement factor H were abruptly reduced in patients with lung adenocarcinoma. Absolute quantitative data of the individual proteome of a healthy and diseased individual can be used as the basis for personalized medicine and health monitoring. Storage over time allows us to identify individual biomarkers in the molecular landscape and prevent pathological conditions.
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- 2023
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5. Validating Amino Acid Variants in Proteogenomics Using Sequence Coverage by Multiple Reads.
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Levitsky LI, Kuznetsova KG, Kliuchnikova AA, Ilina IY, Goncharov AO, Lobas AA, Ivanov MV, Lazarev VN, Ziganshin RH, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Amino Acids, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Peptide Hydrolases, Peptides analysis, Proteome analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Proteogenomics methods
- Abstract
Mass spectrometry-based proteome analysis implies matching the mass spectra of proteolytic peptides to amino acid sequences predicted from genomic sequences. Reliability of peptide variant identification in proteogenomic studies is often lacking. We propose a way to interpret shotgun proteomics results, specifically in the data-dependent acquisition mode, as protein sequence coverage by multiple reads as it is done in nucleic acid sequencing for calling of single nucleotide variants. Multiple reads for each sequence position could be provided by overlapping distinct peptides, thus confirming the presence of certain amino acid residues in the overlapping stretch with a lower false discovery rate. Overlapping distinct peptides originate from miscleaved tryptic peptides in combination with their properly cleaved counterparts and from peptides generated by multiple proteases after the same specimen is subject to parallel digestion and analyzed separately. We illustrate this approach using publicly available multiprotease data sets and our own data generated for the HEK-293 cell line digests obtained using trypsin, LysC, and GluC proteases. Totally, up to 30% of the whole proteome was covered by tryptic peptides with up to 7% covered twofold and more. The proteogenomic analysis of the HEK-293 cell line revealed 36 single amino acid variants, seven of which were supported by multiple reads.
- Published
- 2022
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6. Multiomic Profiling Identified EGF Receptor Signaling as a Potential Inhibitor of Type I Interferon Response in Models of Oncolytic Therapy by Vesicular Stomatitis Virus.
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Nikitina AS, Lipatova AV, Goncharov AO, Kliuchnikova AA, Pyatnitskiy MA, Kuznetsova KG, Hamad A, Vorobyev PO, Alekseeva ON, Mahmoud M, Shakiba Y, Anufrieva KS, Arapidi GP, Ivanov MV, Tarasova IA, Gorshkov MV, Chumakov PM, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, ErbB Receptors genetics, Vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus genetics, Vesiculovirus physiology, Interferon Type I metabolism, Oncolytic Virotherapy, Oncolytic Viruses physiology, Vesicular Stomatitis
- Abstract
Cancer cell lines responded differentially to type I interferon treatment in models of oncolytic therapy using vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). Two opposite cases were considered in this study, glioblastoma DBTRG-05MG and osteosarcoma HOS cell lines exhibiting resistance and sensitivity to VSV after the treatment, respectively. Type I interferon responses were compared for these cell lines by integrative analysis of the transcriptome, proteome, and RNA editome to identify molecular factors determining differential effects observed. Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing was equally induced in both cell lines. However, transcriptome analysis showed that the number of differentially expressed genes was much higher in DBTRG-05MG with a specific enrichment in inflammatory proteins. Further, it was found that two genes, EGFR and HER2, were overexpressed in HOS cells compared with DBTRG-05MG, supporting recent reports that EGF receptor signaling attenuates interferon responses via HER2 co-receptor activity. Accordingly, combined treatment of cells with EGF receptor inhibitors such as gefitinib and type I interferon increases the resistance of sensitive cell lines to VSV. Moreover, sensitive cell lines had increased levels of HER2 protein compared with non-sensitive DBTRG-05MG. Presumably, the level of this protein expression in tumor cells might be a predictive biomarker of their resistance to oncolytic viral therapy.
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- 2022
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7. Interplay between A-to-I Editing and Splicing of RNA: A Potential Point of Application for Cancer Therapy.
- Author
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Goncharov AO, Shender VO, Kuznetsova KG, Kliuchnikova AA, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Adenosine metabolism, Antiviral Agents, Humans, Inosine metabolism, RNA Splicing, RNA, Double-Stranded genetics, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Adenosine Deaminase genetics, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is a system of post-transcriptional modification widely distributed in metazoans which is catalyzed by ADAR enzymes and occurs mostly in double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) before splicing. This type of RNA editing changes the genetic code, as inosine generally pairs with cytosine in contrast to adenosine, and this expectably modulates RNA splicing. We review the interconnections between RNA editing and splicing in the context of human cancer. The editing of transcripts may have various effects on splicing, and resultant alternatively spliced isoforms may be either tumor-suppressive or oncogenic. Dysregulated RNA splicing in cancer often causes the release of excess amounts of dsRNA into cytosol, where specific dsRNA sensors provoke antiviral-like responses, including type I interferon signaling. These responses may arrest cell division, causing apoptosis and, externally, stimulate antitumor immunity. Thus, small-molecule spliceosome inhibitors have been shown to facilitate the antiviral-like signaling and are considered to be potential cancer therapies. In turn, a cytoplasmic isoform of ADAR can deaminate dsRNA in cytosol, thereby decreasing its levels and diminishing antitumor innate immunity. We propose that complete or partial inhibition of ADAR may enhance the proapoptotic and cytotoxic effects of splicing inhibitors and that it may be considered a promising addition to cancer therapies targeting RNA splicing.
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- 2022
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8. Proteome-Wide Analysis of ADAR-Mediated Messenger RNA Editing during Fruit Fly Ontogeny.
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Kliuchnikova AA, Goncharov AO, Levitsky LI, Pyatnitskiy MA, Novikova SE, Kuznetsova KG, Ivanov MV, Ilina IY, Farafonova TE, Zgoda VG, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
- Subjects
- Adenosine Deaminase genetics, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Animals, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Drosophila melanogaster metabolism, Inosine metabolism, Proteome genetics, Proteome metabolism, Proteomics, RNA, Messenger genetics, Drosophila Proteins genetics, Drosophila Proteins metabolism, RNA Editing
- Abstract
Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is an enzymatic post-transcriptional modification which modulates immunity and neural transmission in multicellular organisms. In particular, it involves editing of mRNA codons with the resulting amino acid substitutions. We identified such sites for developmental proteomes of Drosophila melanogaster at the protein level using available data for 15 stages of fruit fly development from egg to imago and 14 time points of embryogenesis. In total, 40 sites were obtained, each belonging to a unique protein, including four sites related to embryogenesis. The interactome analysis has revealed that the majority of the editing-recoded proteins were associated with synaptic vesicle trafficking and actomyosin organization. Quantitation data analysis suggested the existence of a phase-specific RNA editing regulation with yet unknown mechanisms. These findings supported the transcriptome analysis results, which showed that a burst in the RNA editing occurs during insect metamorphosis from pupa to imago. Finally, targeted proteomic analysis was performed to quantify editing-recoded and genomically encoded versions of five proteins in brains of larvae, pupae, and imago insects, which showed a clear tendency toward an increase in the editing rate for each of them. These results will allow a better understanding of the protein role in physiological effects of RNA editing.
- Published
- 2020
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9. Adenosine-to-Inosine RNA Editing in Mouse and Human Brain Proteomes.
- Author
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Levitsky LI, Kliuchnikova AA, Kuznetsova KG, Karpov DS, Ivanov MV, Pyatnitskiy MA, Kalinina OV, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
- Subjects
- Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing metabolism, Animals, Cells, Cultured, Coatomer Protein metabolism, Humans, Mice, Proteome metabolism, Proteomics methods, Adenosine metabolism, Brain metabolism, Inosine metabolism, RNA Editing genetics
- Abstract
Proteogenomics is based on the use of customized genome or RNA sequencing databases for interrogation of shotgun proteomics data in search for proteome-level evidence of genome variations or RNA editing. In this work, the products of adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing in human and murine brain proteomes are identified using publicly available brain proteome LC-MS/MS datasets and an RNA editome database compiled from several sources. After filtering of false-positive results, 20 and 37 sites of editing in proteins belonging to 14 and 32 genes are identified for murine and human brain proteomes, respectively. Eight sites of editing identified with high spectral counts overlapped between human and mouse brain samples. Some of these sites have been previously reported using orthogonal methods, such as α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) glutamate receptors, CYFIP2, coatomer alpha. Also, differential editing between neurons and microglia is demonstrated in this work for some of the proteins from primary murine brain cell cultures. Because many edited sites are still not characterized functionally at the protein level, the results provide a necessary background for their further analysis in normal and diseased cells and tissues using targeted proteomic approaches., (© 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2019
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10. RNA Editing by ADAR Adenosine Deaminases: From Molecular Plasticity of Neural Proteins to the Mechanisms of Human Cancer.
- Author
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Goncharov AO, Kliuchnikova AA, Nasaev SS, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Adenosine Deaminase immunology, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Cellular Senescence physiology, Humans, Inosine metabolism, Interferon Type I metabolism, Proteome metabolism, RNA, Double-Stranded metabolism, RNA-Binding Proteins immunology, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Carcinogenesis metabolism, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, RNA Editing physiology, RNA-Binding Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
RNA editing by adenosine deaminases of the ADAR family attracts a growing interest of researchers, both zoologists studying ecological and evolutionary plasticity of invertebrates and medical biochemists focusing on the mechanisms of cancer and other human diseases. These enzymes deaminate adenosine residues in the double-stranded (ds) regions of RNA with the formation of inosine. As a result, some RNAs change their three-dimensional structure and functions. Adenosine-to-inosine editing in the mRNA coding sequences may cause amino acid substitutions in the encoded proteins. Here, we reviewed current concepts on the functions of two active ADAR isoforms identified in mammals (including humans). The ADAR1 protein, which acts non-specifically on extended dsRNA regions, is capable of immunosuppression via inactivation of the dsRNA interactions with specific sensors inducing the cell immunity. Expression of a specific ADAR1 splicing variant is regulated by the type I interferons by the negative feedback mechanism. It was shown that immunosuppressing effects of ADAR1 facilitate progression of some types of cancer. On the other hand, changes in the amino acid sequences resulting from the mRNA editing by the ADAR enzymes can result in the formation of neoantigens that can activate the antitumor immunity. The ADAR2 isoform acts on RNA more selectively; its function is associated with the editing of mRNA coding regions and can lead to the amino acid substitutions, in particular, those essential for the proper functioning of some neurotransmitter receptors in the central nervous system.
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- 2019
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11. Proteogenomics of Adenosine-to-Inosine RNA Editing in the Fruit Fly.
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Kuznetsova KG, Kliuchnikova AA, Ilina IU, Chernobrovkin AL, Novikova SE, Farafonova TE, Karpov DS, Ivanov MV, Goncharov AO, Ilgisonis EV, Voronko OE, Nasaev SS, Zgoda VG, Zubarev RA, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
- Subjects
- Acyltransferases chemistry, Acyltransferases genetics, Acyltransferases metabolism, Adenosine Deaminase genetics, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Brain metabolism, Databases, Protein, Datasets as Topic, Drosophila Proteins chemistry, Drosophila Proteins genetics, Drosophila Proteins metabolism, Drosophila melanogaster chemistry, Drosophila melanogaster metabolism, Insect Proteins classification, Insect Proteins metabolism, Models, Molecular, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Proteome genetics, Proteome metabolism, Qa-SNARE Proteins genetics, Qa-SNARE Proteins metabolism, Synaptic Vesicles chemistry, Synaptic Vesicles metabolism, Adenosine metabolism, Drosophila melanogaster genetics, Inosine metabolism, Insect Proteins genetics, Proteogenomics methods, RNA Editing
- Abstract
Adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing is one of the most common types of RNA editing, a posttranscriptional modification made by special enzymes. We present a proteomic study on this phenomenon for Drosophila melanogaster. Three proteome data sets were used in the study: two taken from public repository and the third one obtained here. A customized protein sequence database was generated using results of genome-wide adenosine-to-inosine RNA studies and applied for identifying the edited proteins. The total number of 68 edited peptides belonging to 59 proteins was identified in all data sets. Eight of them being shared between the whole insect, head, and brain proteomes. Seven edited sites belonging to synaptic vesicle and membrane trafficking proteins were selected for validation by orthogonal analysis by Multiple Reaction Monitoring. Five editing events in cpx, Syx1A, Cadps, CG4587, and EndoA were validated in fruit fly brain tissue at the proteome level using isotopically labeled standards. Ratios of unedited-to-edited proteoforms varied from 35:1 ( Syx1A) to 1:2 ( EndoA). Lys-137 to Glu editing of endophilin A may have functional consequences for its interaction to membrane. The work demonstrates the feasibility to identify the RNA editing event at the proteome level using shotgun proteomics and customized edited protein database.
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- 2018
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12. Proteogenomics of Malignant Melanoma Cell Lines: The Effect of Stringency of Exome Data Filtering on Variant Peptide Identification in Shotgun Proteomics.
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Lobas AA, Pyatnitskiy MA, Chernobrovkin AL, Ilina IY, Karpov DS, Solovyeva EM, Kuznetsova KG, Ivanov MV, Lyssuk EY, Kliuchnikova AA, Voronko OE, Larin SS, Zubarev RA, Gorshkov MV, and Moshkovskii SA
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- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Chromatography, Liquid, Humans, INDEL Mutation, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Proteomics methods, Search Engine, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Databases, Protein, Exome genetics, Genetic Variation, Melanoma pathology, Proteogenomics methods
- Abstract
The identification of genetically encoded variants at the proteome level is an important problem in cancer proteogenomics. The generation of customized protein databases from DNA or RNA sequencing data is a crucial stage of the identification workflow. Genomic data filtering applied at this stage may significantly modify variant search results, yet its effect is generally left out of the scope of proteogenomic studies. In this work, we focused on this impact using data of exome sequencing and LC-MS/MS analyses of six replicates for eight melanoma cell lines processed by a proteogenomics workflow. The main objectives were identifying variant peptides and revealing the role of the genomic data filtering in the variant identification. A series of six confidence thresholds for single nucleotide polymorphisms and indels from the exome data were applied to generate customized sequence databases of different stringency. In the searches against unfiltered databases, between 100 and 160 variant peptides were identified for each of the cell lines using X!Tandem and MS-GF+ search engines. The recovery rate for variant peptides was ∼1%, which is approximately three times lower than that of the wild-type peptides. Using unfiltered genomic databases for variant searches resulted in higher sensitivity and selectivity of the proteogenomic workflow and positively affected the ability to distinguish the cell lines based on variant peptide signatures.
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- 2018
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13. [ADAR-mediated messenger RNA editing: analysis at the proteome level].
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Kliuchnikova AA, Kuznetsova KG, and Moshkovskii SA
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Adenosine Deaminase metabolism, Proteome biosynthesis, Proteomics methods, RNA Editing physiology
- Abstract
Post-transcriptional RNA editing by RNA specific adenosine deaminases (ADAR) was discovered more than two decades ago. It provides additional regulation of animal and human transcriptome. In most cases, it occurs in nervous tissue, where, as a result of the reaction, adenosine is converted to inosine in particular sites of RNA. In case of messenger RNA, during translation, inosine is recognized as guanine leading to amino acid substitutions. Those substitutions are shown to affect substantially the function of proteins, e.g. subunits of the glutamate receptor. Nevertheless, most of the works on RNA editing use analysis of nucleic acids, even those which deal with a coding RNA. In this review, we propose the use of shotgun proteomics based on high resolution liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry for investigation of the effects of RNA editing at the protein level. Recently developed methods of big data processing allow combining the results of various omics techniques, being referred to as proteogenomics. The proposed proteogenomic approach for the analysis of RNA editing at the protein level will directly conduct a qualitative and quantitative analysis of protein edited sequences in the scale of whole proteome.
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- 2016
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14. Human aqueous humor proteome in cataract, glaucoma, and pseudoexfoliation syndrome.
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Kliuchnikova AA, Samokhina NI, Ilina IY, Karpov DS, Pyatnitskiy MA, Kuznetsova KG, Toropygin IY, Kochergin SA, Alekseev IB, Zgoda VG, Archakov AI, and Moshkovskii SA
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Apolipoproteins D analysis, Biomarkers analysis, Chromatography, Liquid, Humans, Middle Aged, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Aqueous Humor chemistry, Cataract diagnosis, Exfoliation Syndrome diagnosis, Glaucoma diagnosis, Proteome analysis
- Abstract
Twenty-nine human aqueous humor samples from patients with eye diseases such as cataract and glaucoma with and without pseudoexfoliation syndrome were characterized by LC-high resolution MS analysis. In total, 269 protein groups were identified with 1% false discovery rate including 32 groups that were not reported previously for this biological fluid. Since the samples were analyzed individually, but not pooled, 36 proteins were identified in all samples, comprising the constitutive proteome of the fluid. The most dominant molecular function of aqueous humor proteins as determined by GO analysis is endopeptidase inhibitor activity. Label-free protein quantification showed no significant difference between glaucoma and cataract aqueous humor proteomes. At the same time, we found decrease in the level of apolipoprotein D as a marker of the pseudoexfoliation syndrome. The data are available from ProteomeXchange repository (PXD002623)., (© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2016
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