scholarly journals Quantitative comparative analysis of human erythrocyte surface proteins between individuals from two genetically distinct populations

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Ravenhill ◽  
Usheer Kanjee ◽  
Ambroise Ahouidi ◽  
Luis Nobre ◽  
James Williamson ◽  
...  

Abstract Red blood cells (RBCs) play a critical role in oxygen transport, and are the focus of important diseases including malaria and the haemoglobinopathies. Proteins at the RBC surface can determine susceptibility to disease, however previous studies classifying the RBC proteome have not used specific strategies directed at enriching cell surface proteins. Furthermore, there has been no systematic analysis of variation in abundance of RBC surface proteins between genetically disparate human populations. These questions are important to inform not only basic RBC biology but additionally to identify novel candidate receptors for malarial parasites. Here, we use ‘plasma membrane profiling’ and tandem mass tag-based mass spectrometry to enrich and quantify primary RBC cell surface proteins from two sets of nine donors from the UK or Senegal. We define a RBC surface proteome and identify potential Plasmodium receptors based on either diminished protein abundance, or increased variation in RBCs from West African individuals.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonescu Costin ◽  
Eden Ross ◽  
Rehman Ata ◽  
Thanusi Thavarajah ◽  
Sergei Medvedev ◽  
...  

The cell surface proteome controls numerous cellular functions including cell migration and adhesion, intercellular communication and nutrient uptake. Cell surface proteins are controlled by acute changes in protein abundance at the plasma membrane through regulation of endocytosis and recycling (endomembrane traffic). Many cellular signals regulate endomembrane traffic, including metabolic signaling; however, the extent to which the cell surface proteome is controlled by acute regulation of endomembrane traffic under various conditions remains incompletely understood. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a key metabolic sensor that is activated upon reduced cellular energy availability. AMPK activation alters the endomembrane traffic of a few specific proteins, as part of an adaptive response to increase energy intake and reduce energy expenditure. How increased AMPK activity during energy stress may globally regulate the cell surface proteome is not well understood. To study how AMPK may regulate the cell surface proteome, we used cell-impermeable biotinylation to selectively purify cell surface proteins under various conditions. Using ESI-MS/MS, we found that acute (90 min) treatment with the AMPK activator A-769662 elicits broad control of the cell surface abundance of diverse proteins. In particular, A-769662 treatment depleted from the cell surface proteins with functions in cell migration and adhesion. To complement our mass spectrometry results, we used other methods to show that A-769662 treatment results in impaired cell migration. Further, A-769662 treatment reduced the cell surface abundance of β1-integrin, a key cell migration protein, and AMPK gene silencing prevented this effect. While the control of the cell surface abundance of various proteins by A-769662 treatment was broad, it was also selective, as this treatment did not change the cell surface abundance of the transferrin receptor. Hence, the cell surface proteome is subject to acute regulation by treatment with A-769662, at least some of which is mediated by the metabolic sensor AMPK.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Ravenhill ◽  
Lior Soday ◽  
Jack Houghton ◽  
Robin Antrobus ◽  
Michael P. Weekes

AbstractMonocytes are a critical component of the cellular innate immune system, and can be subdivided into classical, intermediate and non-classical subsets on the basis of surface CD14 and CD16 expression. Classical monocytes play the canonical role of phagocytosis, and account for the majority of circulating cells. Intermediate and non-classical cells are known to exhibit varying levels of phagocytosis and cytokine secretion, and are differentially expanded in certain pathological states. Characterisation of cell surface proteins expressed by each subset is informative not only to improve understanding of phenotype, but may also provide biological insights into function. Here we use highly multiplexed Tandem-Mass-Tag (TMT)-based mass spectrometry with selective cell surface biotinylation to characterise the classical monocyte surface proteome, then interrogate the phenotypic differences between each monocyte subset to identify novel protein markers.


1980 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 866-873 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Hsieh ◽  
N Sueoka

Antiserum against a rat neuronal tumor cell line (B103) has been prepared in rabbit by intravenous injection of live cells. This immune serum (anti-B103) precipitates a few cell surface proteins recognizable by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis as common radioiodinatable spots in 15 different rat neural cell lines and in mouse and rat fibroblast cell lines. The apparent molecular weight of one major common protein (II4) is estimated by SDS gel electrophoresis to be somewhere between 80,000 and 90,000 and another protein (I3) to be 120,000. These two proteins are consistently recognized in various cell lines by this antiserum. Furthermore, at a 1:20 dilution, this serum causes monolayer cells to round up usually within 0.5 h and detach from the plate within 3 h. It also inhibits spreading of freshly plated cells. These effects of the antiserum are reversible. Upon absorption of the antiserum with cells (e.g., absorbed with a glial cell line, B27), the serum no longer causes the rounding up of the monolayer cells, it does not inhibit cell spreading, and it does not immune-precipitate the two common proteins from the cell surface of various cell lines. Antisera against several other rat cell lines also precipitate the same common proteins (II4 and I3) from the cell surface and prevent cell spreading. These data suggest that the antibody acts first at the cell surface and then inhibits cell spreading or rounding up of spread cells. The consistent pattern of the immunoprecipitated cell surface proteins on the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis makes these two common surface proteins (II4 or I3 or both) possible candidates for target proteins to which the antibody binds. Thus, they may play a critical role in cell spreading.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 265-265
Author(s):  
Francesco Di Meo ◽  
Christina Yu ◽  
Annamaria Cesarano ◽  
Aljoufi Arafat ◽  
Silvia Marino ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable malignancy of mature plasma cells. Despite major advances in the therapeutic armamentarium of MM, only 50% of patients survive more than 5 years after diagnosis, with significantly lower rates (21%) for high-risk patients. Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy targeting BCMA (B-cell maturation antigen) shows high response rates in relapsed/refractory patients. However, most patients have disease remission that lasts less than 18 months, prompting the search for additional and synergistic therapeutic approaches. We unbiasedly mapped the cell surface proteome of MM by integrating Mass-Spectrometry (MS) and RNA-seq analyses from 7 MM cell lines and 904 primary MM patient samples bearing high-risk cytogenetics. To identify cell surface proteins, we ran a pool of 4,761 proteins and 16,000+ transcripts through five repositories. An integrated scoring database was developed by scoring each ID based on the number of databases (0-5) it was identified in, with 0 if the molecule was not found in any and 5 if the protein was found in all five. We identified 402 proteins with a surface score of 3 or higher in MM cell lines and patient samples by transcriptomics and proteomics. We prioritized the 326 candidates that were more highly expressed in patients. Based on functional enrichment analyses, we found the proteins formed three main networks with immune mechanisms representing the largest cluster (227 out of 326 cell surface proteins) followed by transporters and adhesion proteins.Based on a pipeline we previously established (1), we further selected 97 candidates minimally expressed in normal tissues. This list included current therapeutic targets such as BCMA, SLAMF7, ITGB7 and LY9. Validation in primary patient samples by western blot and flow-cytometric analyses, enabled the identification of 10 top candidates (CCR1, CD320, FCRL3, IL12RB1, ITGA4, LAX1, LILRB4, LRRC8D, SEMA4A, SLAMF6) that resulted most frequently and highly expressed. We found that LAX1, LILRB4 and SEMA4A significantly impact myeloma patient overall survival based on Kaplan-Meier analysis in the MM Research Foundation (MMRF) cohort (2). CCR1, IL12RB1, LILRB4 and SEMA4A were upregulated by the treatment with Bortezomib or Venetoclax that conversely, decreased BCMA expression in MM U266 cells. By stratifying the patient population, we found that the SEMA4A and LAX1 were up-regulated in patients with t(4;14) compared to patients with no cytogenetic abnormality; LILRB4 in patients with t(14;16) and CCR1 patients with t(14;16) and t(14;20). By calculating co-expression levels CCR1-LILRB4 and CCR1-FCRL3 resulted co-expressed in 100% of patients. For safety purposes (3), we excluded candidates with high (>55%) protein abundance in highly-purified normal hematopoietic stem cells and activated T-cells, narrowing down the list to 6 top candidates (CCR1, FCRL3, IL12RB1, LILRB4, LRRC8D, SEMA4A). To define the function of this group of promising cell surface targets, we used a CRISPR/Cas9 inducible system in KMS11 MM cells. We found that knock-out of CCR1, LRRC8D and SEMA4A individually reduces the MM cell growth by ~60%, 50% and 50% respectively, and almost completely abrogates MM cell migration through porous chambers by >80%. By co-culturing irradiated KO and control MM cells with healthy donor T-cells we also found that lack of CCR1 increased T-cell proliferation by 50% compared to controls and enhanced killing of MM cells, suggesting that CCR1 may suppress T-cell mediated immune responses in addition to play a role in MM cell survival and migration. This study suggests the contribution of an altered MM surfaceome to disease development and may lead to potential novel immunotherapeutic approaches for high-risk MM. References 1. Perna F et al., Cancer Cell 2017 3. Dong C et al., in press Oncogene 2021 Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonescu Costin ◽  
Eden Ross ◽  
Rehman Ata ◽  
Thanusi Thavarajah ◽  
Sergei Medvedev ◽  
...  

The cell surface proteome controls numerous cellular functions including cell migration and adhesion, intercellular communication and nutrient uptake. Cell surface proteins are controlled by acute changes in protein abundance at the plasma membrane through regulation of endocytosis and recycling (endomembrane traffic). Many cellular signals regulate endomembrane traffic, including metabolic signaling; however, the extent to which the cell surface proteome is controlled by acute regulation of endomembrane traffic under various conditions remains incompletely understood. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a key metabolic sensor that is activated upon reduced cellular energy availability. AMPK activation alters the endomembrane traffic of a few specific proteins, as part of an adaptive response to increase energy intake and reduce energy expenditure. How increased AMPK activity during energy stress may globally regulate the cell surface proteome is not well understood. To study how AMPK may regulate the cell surface proteome, we used cell-impermeable biotinylation to selectively purify cell surface proteins under various conditions. Using ESI-MS/MS, we found that acute (90 min) treatment with the AMPK activator A-769662 elicits broad control of the cell surface abundance of diverse proteins. In particular, A-769662 treatment depleted from the cell surface proteins with functions in cell migration and adhesion. To complement our mass spectrometry results, we used other methods to show that A-769662 treatment results in impaired cell migration. Further, A-769662 treatment reduced the cell surface abundance of β1-integrin, a key cell migration protein, and AMPK gene silencing prevented this effect. While the control of the cell surface abundance of various proteins by A-769662 treatment was broad, it was also selective, as this treatment did not change the cell surface abundance of the transferrin receptor. Hence, the cell surface proteome is subject to acute regulation by treatment with A-769662, at least some of which is mediated by the metabolic sensor AMPK.


Author(s):  
Watt W. Webb

Plasma membrane heterogeneity is implicit in the existence of specialized cell surface organelles which are necessary for cellular function; coated pits, post and pre-synaptic terminals, microvillae, caveolae, tight junctions, focal contacts and endothelial polarization are examples. The persistence of these discrete molecular aggregates depends on localized restraint of the constituent molecules within specific domaines in the cell surface by strong intermolecular bonds and/or anchorage to extended cytoskeleton. The observed plasticity of many of organelles and the dynamical modulation of domaines induced by cellular signaling evidence evanescent intermolecular interactions even in conspicuous aggregates. There is also strong evidence that universal restraints on the mobility of cell surface proteins persist virtually everywhere in cell surfaces, not only in the discrete organelles. Diffusion of cell surface proteins is slowed by several orders of magnitude relative to corresponding protein diffusion coefficients in isolated lipid membranes as has been determined by various ensemble average methods of measurement such as fluorescence photobleaching recovery(FPR).


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