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Measurement of human surfactant protein-B turnover in vivo from tracheal aspirates using targeted proteomics.

Authors :
Tomazela DM
Patterson BW
Hanson E
Spence KL
Kanion TB
Salinger DH
Vicini P
Barret H
Heins HB
Cole FS
Hamvas A
MacCoss MJ
Source :
Analytical chemistry [Anal Chem] 2010 Mar 15; Vol. 82 (6), pp. 2561-7.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

We describe a method to measure protein synthesis and catabolism in humans without prior purification and use the method to measure the turnover of surfactant protein-B (SP-B). SP-B, a lung-specific, hydrophobic protein essential for fetal-neonatal respiratory transition, is present in only picomolar quantities in tracheal aspirate samples and difficult to isolate for dynamic turnover studies using traditional in vivo tracer techniques. Using infusion of [5,5,5-(2)H(3)] leucine and a targeted proteomics method, we measured both the quantity and kinetics of SP-B tryptic peptides in tracheal aspirate samples of symptomatic newborn infants. The fractional synthetic rate (FSR) of SP-B measured using the most abundant proteolytic fragment, a 10 amino acid peptide from the carboxy-terminus of proSP-B (SPTGEWLPR), from the circulating leucine pool was 0.035 +/- 0.005 h(-1), and the fractional catabolic rate was 0.044 +/- 0.003 h(-1). This technique permits high-throughput and sensitive measurement of turnover of low abundance proteins with minimal sample preparation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-6882
Volume :
82
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Analytical chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20178338
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/ac1001433