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Proteomic and metabolomic changes driven by elevating myocardial creatine suggest novel metabolic feedback mechanisms

Authors :
Adam Nabeebaccus
Stefan Neubauer
Manuel Mayr
Thomas R. Eykyn
Debra J. McAndrew
R. Andrew Atkinson
Brett A. O’Brien
Xiaoke Yin
Sevasti Zervou
Rebecca L. Cross
Craig A. Lygate
Source :
Amino Acids, Zervou, S, Yin, X, A. Nabeebaccus, A, O'Brien, B, L. Cross, R, McAndrew, D J, Atkinson, A, Eykyn, T, Mayr, M, Neubauer, S & Lygate, C A 2016, ' Proteomic and metabolomic changes driven by elevating myocardial creatine suggest novel metabolic feedback mechanisms ', AMINO ACIDS, pp. 1-13 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-016-2236-x
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Mice over-expressing the creatine transporter have elevated myocardial creatine levels [Cr] and are protected against ischaemia/reperfusion injury via improved energy reserve. However, mice with very high [Cr] develop cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction. To investigate these contrasting effects, we applied a non-biased hypothesis-generating approach to quantify global protein and metabolite changes in the LV of mice stratified for [Cr] levels: wildtype, moderately elevated, and high [Cr] (65–85; 100–135; 160–250 nmol/mg protein, respectively). Male mice received an echocardiogram at 7 weeks of age with tissue harvested at 8 weeks. RV was used for [Cr] quantification by HPLC to select LV tissue for subsequent analysis. Two-dimensional difference in-gel electrophoresis identified differentially expressed proteins, which were manually picked and trypsin digested for nano-LC–MS/MS. Principal component analysis (PCA) showed efficient group separation (ANOVA P ≤ 0.05) and peptide sequences were identified by mouse database (UniProt 201203) using Mascot. A total of 27 unique proteins were found to be differentially expressed between normal and high [Cr], with proteins showing [Cr]-dependent differential expression, chosen for confirmation, e.g. α-crystallin B, a heat shock protein implicated in cardio-protection and myozenin-2, which could contribute to the hypertrophic phenotype. Nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H-NMR at 700 MHz) identified multiple strong correlations between [Cr] and key cardiac metabolites. For example, positive correlations with α-glucose (r² = 0.45; P = 0.002), acetyl-carnitine (r² = 0.50; P = 0.001), glutamine (r² = 0.59; P = 0.0002); and negative correlations with taurine (r² = 0.74; P

Details

ISSN :
14382199 and 09394451
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Amino Acids
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5800a034e71822be7a68e9d5486adffa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-016-2236-x