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Merck
  • Axonal transport proteomics reveals mobilization of translation machinery to the lesion site in injured sciatic nerve.

Axonal transport proteomics reveals mobilization of translation machinery to the lesion site in injured sciatic nerve.

Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP (2009-12-04)
Izhak Michaelevski, Katalin F Medzihradszky, Aenoch Lynn, Alma L Burlingame, Mike Fainzilber
摘要

Investigations of the molecular mechanisms underlying responses to nerve injury have highlighted the importance of axonal transport systems. To obtain a comprehensive view of the protein ensembles associated with axonal transport in injured axons, we analyzed the protein compositions of axoplasm concentrated at ligatures following crush injury of rat sciatic nerve. LC-MS/MS analyses of iTRAQ-labeled peptides from axoplasm distal and proximal to the ligation sites revealed protein ensembles transported in both anterograde and retrograde directions. Variability of replicates did not allow straightforward assignment of proteins to functional transport categories; hence, we performed principal component analysis and factor analysis with subsequent clustering to determine the most prominent injury-related transported proteins. This strategy circumvented experimental variability and allowed the extraction of biologically meaningful information from the quantitative neuroproteomics experiments. 299 proteins were highlighted by principal component analysis and factor analysis, 145 of which correlate with retrograde and 154 of which correlate with anterograde transport after injury. The analyses reveal extensive changes in both anterograde and retrograde transport proteomes in injured peripheral axons and emphasize the importance of RNA binding and translational machineries in the axonal response to injury.

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iTRAQ® 试剂多重检测试剂盒