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Massive Proteogenomic Reanalysis of Publicly Available Proteomic Datasets of Human Tissues in Search for Protein Recoding via Adenosine-to-Inosine RNA Editing.

Authors :
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
Moshkovskii SA
Source :
Journal of proteome research [J Proteome Res] 2023 Jun 02; Vol. 22 (6), pp. 1695-1711. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 09.
Publication Year :
2023

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.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1535-3907
Volume :
22
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of proteome research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37158322
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.2c00740