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Proteome Landscape of Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) of Retinal Pigment Epithelium Shares Commonalities With Malignancy-Associated EMT

Authors :
Karl J. Wahlin
Jun Wan
Ravi Chakra Turaga
Cynthia A. Berlinicke
Jiang Qian
Joseph L. Mertz
Melissa M. Liu
Ming-Wen Hu
Donald J. Zack
Srinivasa R. Sripathi
Julien Maruotti
Source :
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics : MCP
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2021.

Abstract

Stress and injury to the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) often lead to dedifferentiation and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). These processes have been implicated in several retinal diseases, including proliferative vitreoretinopathy, diabetic retinopathy, and age-related macular degeneration. Despite the importance of RPE-EMT and the large body of data characterizing malignancy-related EMT, comprehensive proteomic studies to define the protein changes and pathways underlying RPE-EMT have not been reported. This study sought to investigate the temporal protein expression changes that occur in a human-induced pluripotent stem cell–based RPE-EMT model. We utilized multiplexed isobaric tandem mass tag labeling followed by high-resolution tandem MS for precise and in-depth quantification of the RPE-EMT proteome. We have identified and quantified 7937 protein groups in our tandem mass tag–based MS analysis. We observed a total of 532 proteins that are differentially regulated during RPE-EMT. Furthermore, we integrated our proteomic data with prior transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) data to provide additional insights into RPE-EMT mechanisms. To validate these results, we have performed a label-free single-shot data-independent acquisition MS study. Our integrated analysis indicates both the commonality and uniqueness of RPE-EMT compared with malignancy-associated EMT. Our comparative analysis also revealed that multiple age-related macular degeneration–associated risk factors are differentially regulated during RPE-EMT. Together, our integrated dataset provides a comprehensive RPE-EMT atlas and resource for understanding the molecular signaling events and associated biological pathways that underlie RPE-EMT onset. This resource has already facilitated the identification of chemical modulators that could inhibit RPE-EMT, and it will hopefully aid in ongoing efforts to develop EMT inhibition as an approach for the treatment of retinal disease.<br />Graphical Abstract<br />Highlights • Proteomics data were integrated with prior transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) data on RPE-EMT. • Dysregulated RPE-EMT proteome shares commonality with malignancy-associated EMT. • Altered RPE-EMT proteome signatures correlated with known AMD-associated risk factors. • Protein kinases and phosphatases crosstalk modulate RPE-EMT.<br />In Brief EMT can play a role in retinal diseases. Here, we present a comprehensive proteomic analysis aimed at defining the temporal protein expression changes associated with EMT of stem cell–derived retinal pigment epithelial cells. Tandem mass tag and direct data-independent acquisition MS approaches were performed after inducing RPE-EMT by enzymatic dissociation. We present integration of our proteomic data with prior transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) data to provide additional insights into the RPE-EMT progression.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15359484 and 15359476
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics : MCP
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f434ce93c2c1575dac4028fd9af5368