Proteomics of protein trafficking by in vivo tissue-specific labeling
Conventional approaches to identify secreted factors that regulate homeostasis are limited in their abilities to identify the tissues/cells of origin and destination. We established a platform to identify secreted protein trafficking between organs using an engineered biotin ligase (BirA*G3) that bi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2021-04, Vol.12 (1), p.2382-22, Article 2382 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Conventional approaches to identify secreted factors that regulate homeostasis are limited in their abilities to identify the tissues/cells of origin and destination. We established a platform to identify secreted protein trafficking between organs using an engineered biotin ligase (BirA*G3) that biotinylates, promiscuously, proteins in a subcellular compartment of one tissue. Subsequently, biotinylated proteins are affinity-enriched and identified from distal organs using quantitative mass spectrometry. Applying this approach in
Drosophila
, we identify 51 muscle-secreted proteins from heads and 269 fat body-secreted proteins from legs/muscles, including CG2145 (human ortholog ENDOU) that binds directly to muscles and promotes activity. In addition, in mice, we identify 291 serum proteins secreted from conditional BirA*G3 embryo stem cell-derived teratomas, including low-abundance proteins with hormonal properties. Our findings indicate that the communication network of secreted proteins is vast. This approach has broad potential across different model systems to identify cell-specific secretomes and mediators of interorgan communication in health or disease.
The network of proteins secreted for interorgan communication is poorly understood. Here, the authors develop a method, based on protein labeling, to study cell-specific secretomes and interorgan protein trafficking, and demonstrate their approach in
Drosophila
and mouse models. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-021-22599-x |