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2.
Nature ; 590(7847): 649-654, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33627808

RESUMO

The cell cycle, over which cells grow and divide, is a fundamental process of life. Its dysregulation has devastating consequences, including cancer1-3. The cell cycle is driven by precise regulation of proteins in time and space, which creates variability between individual proliferating cells. To our knowledge, no systematic investigations of such cell-to-cell proteomic variability exist. Here we present a comprehensive, spatiotemporal map of human proteomic heterogeneity by integrating proteomics at subcellular resolution with single-cell transcriptomics and precise temporal measurements of individual cells in the cell cycle. We show that around one-fifth of the human proteome displays cell-to-cell variability, identify hundreds of proteins with previously unknown associations with mitosis and the cell cycle, and provide evidence that several of these proteins have oncogenic functions. Our results show that cell cycle progression explains less than half of all cell-to-cell variability, and that most cycling proteins are regulated post-translationally, rather than by transcriptomic cycling. These proteins are disproportionately phosphorylated by kinases that regulate cell fate, whereas non-cycling proteins that vary between cells are more likely to be modified by kinases that regulate metabolism. This spatially resolved proteomic map of the cell cycle is integrated into the Human Protein Atlas and will serve as a resource for accelerating molecular studies of the human cell cycle and cell proliferation.


Assuntos
Ciclo Celular , Proteogenômica/métodos , Análise de Célula Única/métodos , Transcriptoma , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Linhagem da Célula , Proliferação de Células , Humanos , Interfase , Mitose , Proteínas Oncogênicas/metabolismo , Fosforilação , Proteínas Quinases/metabolismo , Proteoma/metabolismo , Fatores de Tempo
3.
Proteomics ; 20(23): e1900361, 2020 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32558245

RESUMO

After a century of research, the human centrosome continues to fascinate. Based on immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, an extensive inventory of the protein components of the human centrosome, and the centriolar satellites, with the important contribution of over 300 novel proteins localizing to these compartments is presented. A network of candidate centrosome proteins involved in ubiquitination, including six interaction partners of the Kelch-like protein 21, and an additional network of protein phosphatases, together supporting the suggested role of the centrosome as an interactive hub for cell signaling, is identified. Analysis of multi-localization across cellular organelles analyzed within the Human Protein Atlas (HPA) project shows how multi-localizing proteins are particularly overrepresented in centriolar satellites, supporting the dynamic nature and wide range of functions for this compartment. In summary, the spatial dissection of the human centrosome and centriolar satellites described here provides a comprehensive knowledgebase for further exploration of their proteomes.


Assuntos
Centrossomo , Proteoma , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , Centríolos/metabolismo , Centrossomo/metabolismo , Humanos , Organelas/metabolismo , Proteoma/metabolismo , Ubiquitinação
4.
Sci Signal ; 12(609)2019 11 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31772123

RESUMO

The proteins secreted by human cells (collectively referred to as the secretome) are important not only for the basic understanding of human biology but also for the identification of potential targets for future diagnostics and therapies. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of proteins predicted to be secreted in human cells, which provides information about their final localization in the human body, including the proteins actively secreted to peripheral blood. The analysis suggests that a large number of the proteins of the secretome are not secreted out of the cell, but instead are retained intracellularly, whereas another large group of proteins were identified that are predicted to be retained locally at the tissue of expression and not secreted into the blood. Proteins detected in the human blood by mass spectrometry-based proteomics and antibody-based immunoassays are also presented with estimates of their concentrations in the blood. The results are presented in an updated version 19 of the Human Protein Atlas in which each gene encoding a secretome protein is annotated to provide an open-access knowledge resource of the human secretome, including body-wide expression data, spatial localization data down to the single-cell and subcellular levels, and data about the presence of proteins that are detectable in the blood.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados de Proteínas , Proteoma/metabolismo , Proteômica , Humanos
5.
Cells ; 7(10)2018 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30248895

RESUMO

Vimentin is a protein that has been linked to a large variety of pathophysiological conditions, including cataracts, Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, HIV and cancer. Vimentin has also been shown to regulate a wide spectrum of basic cellular functions. In cells, vimentin assembles into a network of filaments that spans the cytoplasm. It can also be found in smaller, non-filamentous forms that can localise both within cells and within the extracellular microenvironment. The vimentin structure can be altered by subunit exchange, cleavage into different sizes, re-annealing, post-translational modifications and interacting proteins. Together with the observation that different domains of vimentin might have evolved under different selection pressures that defined distinct biological functions for different parts of the protein, the many diverse variants of vimentin might be the cause of its functional diversity. A number of review articles have focussed on the biology and medical aspects of intermediate filament proteins without particular commitment to vimentin, and other reviews have focussed on intermediate filaments in an in vitro context. In contrast, the present review focusses almost exclusively on vimentin, and covers both ex vivo and in vivo data from tissue culture and from living organisms, including a summary of the many phenotypes of vimentin knockout animals. Our aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the current understanding of the many diverse aspects of vimentin, from biochemical, mechanical, cellular, systems biology and medical perspectives.

6.
Oncotarget ; 9(28): 19730-19744, 2018 Apr 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29731978

RESUMO

In tumor tissues, hypoxia is a commonly observed feature resulting from rapidly proliferating cancer cells outgrowing their surrounding vasculature network. Transformed cancer cells are known to exhibit phenotypic alterations, enabling continuous proliferation despite a limited oxygen supply. The four-step isogenic BJ cell model enables studies of defined steps of tumorigenesis: the normal, immortalized, transformed, and metastasizing stages. By transcriptome profiling under atmospheric and moderate hypoxic (3% O2) conditions, we observed that despite being highly similar, the four cell lines of the BJ model responded strikingly different to hypoxia. Besides corroborating many of the known responses to hypoxia, we demonstrate that the transcriptome adaptation to moderate hypoxia resembles the process of malignant transformation. The transformed cells displayed a distinct capability of metabolic switching, reflected in reversed gene expression patterns for several genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation and glycolytic pathways. By profiling the stage-specific responses to hypoxia, we identified ASS1 as a potential prognostic marker in hypoxic tumors. This study demonstrates the usefulness of the BJ cell model for highlighting the interconnection of pathways involved in malignant transformation and hypoxic response.

7.
Science ; 356(6340)2017 05 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28495876

RESUMO

Resolving the spatial distribution of the human proteome at a subcellular level can greatly increase our understanding of human biology and disease. Here we present a comprehensive image-based map of subcellular protein distribution, the Cell Atlas, built by integrating transcriptomics and antibody-based immunofluorescence microscopy with validation by mass spectrometry. Mapping the in situ localization of 12,003 human proteins at a single-cell level to 30 subcellular structures enabled the definition of the proteomes of 13 major organelles. Exploration of the proteomes revealed single-cell variations in abundance or spatial distribution and localization of about half of the proteins to multiple compartments. This subcellular map can be used to refine existing protein-protein interaction networks and provides an important resource to deconvolute the highly complex architecture of the human cell.


Assuntos
Imagem Molecular , Organelas/química , Organelas/metabolismo , Mapas de Interação de Proteínas , Proteoma/análise , Proteoma/metabolismo , Análise de Célula Única , Linhagem Celular , Conjuntos de Dados como Assunto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Espectrometria de Massas , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Mapeamento de Interação de Proteínas , Proteoma/genética , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Frações Subcelulares , Transcriptoma
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(8): E1413-E1421, 2017 02 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28174275

RESUMO

Fibroblasts are a main player in the tumor-inhibitory microenvironment. Upon tumor initiation and progression, fibroblasts can lose their tumor-inhibitory capacity and promote tumor growth. The molecular mechanisms that underlie this switch have not been defined completely. Previously, we identified four proteins overexpressed in cancer-associated fibroblasts and linked to Rho GTPase signaling. Here, we show that knocking out the Ras homolog family member A (RhoA) gene in normal fibroblasts decreased their tumor-inhibitory capacity, as judged by neighbor suppression in vitro and accompanied by promotion of tumor growth in vivo. This also induced PC3 cancer cell motility and increased colony size in 2D cultures. RhoA knockout in fibroblasts induced vimentin intermediate filament reorganization, accompanied by reduced contractile force and increased stiffness of cells. There was also loss of wide F-actin stress fibers and large focal adhesions. In addition, we observed a significant loss of α-smooth muscle actin, which indicates a difference between RhoA knockout fibroblasts and classic cancer-associated fibroblasts. In 3D collagen matrix, RhoA knockout reduced fibroblast branching and meshwork formation and resulted in more compactly clustered tumor-cell colonies in coculture with PC3 cells, which might boost tumor stem-like properties. Coculturing RhoA knockout fibroblasts and PC3 cells induced expression of proinflammatory genes in both. Inflammatory mediators may induce tumor cell stemness. Network enrichment analysis of transcriptomic changes, however, revealed that the Rho signaling pathway per se was significantly triggered only after coculturing with tumor cells. Taken together, our findings in vivo and in vitro indicate that Rho signaling governs the inhibitory effects by fibroblasts on tumor-cell growth.


Assuntos
Fibroblastos Associados a Câncer/metabolismo , Proliferação de Células/fisiologia , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Proteína rhoA de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Células Cultivadas , Colágeno/metabolismo , Feminino , Adesões Focais/metabolismo , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Camundongos , Camundongos SCID , Transdução de Sinais/fisiologia , Fibras de Estresse/metabolismo , Quinases Associadas a rho/metabolismo
9.
Mol Syst Biol ; 12(10): 883, 2016 Oct 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27951527

RESUMO

An important issue for molecular biology is to establish whether transcript levels of a given gene can be used as proxies for the corresponding protein levels. Here, we have developed a targeted proteomics approach for a set of human non-secreted proteins based on parallel reaction monitoring to measure, at steady-state conditions, absolute protein copy numbers across human tissues and cell lines and compared these levels with the corresponding mRNA levels using transcriptomics. The study shows that the transcript and protein levels do not correlate well unless a gene-specific RNA-to-protein (RTP) conversion factor independent of the tissue type is introduced, thus significantly enhancing the predictability of protein copy numbers from RNA levels. The results show that the RTP ratio varies significantly with a few hundred copies per mRNA molecule for some genes to several hundred thousands of protein copies per mRNA molecule for others. In conclusion, our data suggest that transcriptome analysis can be used as a tool to predict the protein copy numbers per cell, thus forming an attractive link between the field of genomics and proteomics.


Assuntos
Perfilação da Expressão Gênica/métodos , Proteômica/métodos , Linhagem Celular , Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Proteoma/genética , Proteoma/metabolismo
10.
Brief Bioinform ; 16(6): 941-9, 2015 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25829468

RESUMO

Sequencing-based gene expression methods like RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) have become increasingly common, but it is often claimed that results obtained in different studies are not comparable owing to the influence of laboratory batch effects, differences in RNA extraction and sequencing library preparation methods and bioinformatics processing pipelines. It would be unfortunate if different experiments were in fact incomparable, as there is great promise in data fusion and meta-analysis applied to sequencing data sets. We therefore compared reported gene expression measurements for ostensibly similar samples (specifically, human brain, heart and kidney samples) in several different RNA-seq studies to assess their overall consistency and to examine the factors contributing most to systematic differences. The same comparisons were also performed after preprocessing all data in a consistent way, eliminating potential bias from bioinformatics pipelines. We conclude that published human tissue RNA-seq expression measurements appear relatively consistent in the sense that samples cluster by tissue rather than laboratory of origin given simple preprocessing transformations. The article is supplemented by a detailed walkthrough with embedded R code and figures.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados Genéticas , RNA/genética , Análise de Sequência de RNA , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Humanos , Rim/metabolismo , Miocárdio/metabolismo
11.
Mol Cell Proteomics ; 13(2): 397-406, 2014 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24309898

RESUMO

Global classification of the human proteins with regards to spatial expression patterns across organs and tissues is important for studies of human biology and disease. Here, we used a quantitative transcriptomics analysis (RNA-Seq) to classify the tissue-specific expression of genes across a representative set of all major human organs and tissues and combined this analysis with antibody-based profiling of the same tissues. To present the data, we launch a new version of the Human Protein Atlas that integrates RNA and protein expression data corresponding to ∼80% of the human protein-coding genes with access to the primary data for both the RNA and the protein analysis on an individual gene level. We present a classification of all human protein-coding genes with regards to tissue-specificity and spatial expression pattern. The integrative human expression map can be used as a starting point to explore the molecular constituents of the human body.


Assuntos
Anticorpos/farmacologia , Expressão Gênica , Genômica/métodos , Especificidade de Órgãos/genética , Proteômica/métodos , Transcriptoma , Feminino , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Humanos , Masculino , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/metabolismo , Proteoma/genética , Proteoma/metabolismo , Integração de Sistemas , Análise Serial de Tecidos
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(17): 6853-8, 2013 Apr 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23569271

RESUMO

The transformation of normal cells to malignant, metastatic tumor cells is a multistep process caused by the sequential acquirement of genetic changes. To identify these changes, we compared the transcriptomes and levels and distribution of proteins in a four-stage cell model of isogenically matched normal, immortalized, transformed, and metastatic human cells, using deep transcriptome sequencing and immunofluorescence microscopy. The data show that ∼6% (n = 1,357) of the human protein-coding genes are differentially expressed across the stages in the model. Interestingly, the majority of these genes are down-regulated, linking malignant transformation to dedifferentiation. The up-regulated genes are mainly components that control cellular proliferation, whereas the down-regulated genes consist of proteins exposed on or secreted from the cell surface. As many of the identified gene products control basic cellular functions that are defective in cancers, the data provide candidates for follow-up studies to investigate their functional roles in tumor formation. When we further compared the expression levels of four of the identified proteins in clinical cancer cohorts, similar differences were observed between benign and cancer cells, as in the cell model. This shows that this comprehensive demonstration of the molecular changes underlying malignant transformation is a relevant model to study the process of tumor formation.


Assuntos
Transformação Celular Neoplásica/metabolismo , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Proteínas/metabolismo , Antígenos Transformantes de Poliomavirus/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Genes ras/fisiologia , Estudos de Associação Genética , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Humanos , Imuno-Histoquímica , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Análise de Componente Principal , Telomerase/metabolismo
13.
J Proteome Res ; 12(1): 299-307, 2013 Jan 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23227862

RESUMO

One of the major challenges of a chromosome-centric proteome project is to explore in a systematic manner the potential proteins identified from the chromosomal genome sequence, but not yet characterized on a protein level. Here, we describe the use of RNA deep sequencing to screen human cell lines for RNA profiles and to use this information to select cell lines suitable for characterization of the corresponding gene product. In this manner, the subcellular localization of proteins can be analyzed systematically using antibody-based confocal microscopy. We demonstrate the usefulness of selecting cell lines with high expression levels of RNA transcripts to increase the likelihood of high quality immunofluorescence staining and subsequent successful subcellular localization of the corresponding protein. The results show a path to combine transcriptomics with affinity proteomics to characterize the proteins in a gene- or chromosome-centric manner.


Assuntos
Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Proteínas , Proteoma , RNA , Sequência de Bases , Linhagem Celular/metabolismo , Cromossomos Humanos , Genoma Humano , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala , Humanos , Proteínas/genética , Proteínas/metabolismo , RNA/genética , RNA/metabolismo , Análise de Sequência de RNA
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