Proteomic profiling of the human T-cell nucleolus

► Characterisation of the T-cell nucleolar proteome, using an organellar approach coupled with mass spectrometry. ► First comprehensive survey of the nucleolar proteome of T-cells. ► Identification of 23 proteins, associated with various processes critical to T-cell biology and immune function. ► Ne...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular immunology 2011-12, Vol.49 (3), p.441-452
Hauptverfasser: Jarboui, Mohamed Ali, Wynne, Kieran, Elia, Giuliano, Hall, William W., Gautier, Virginie W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► Characterisation of the T-cell nucleolar proteome, using an organellar approach coupled with mass spectrometry. ► First comprehensive survey of the nucleolar proteome of T-cells. ► Identification of 23 proteins, associated with various processes critical to T-cell biology and immune function. ► New perspective on how the T-cell nucleolus could contribute to lymphocyte biology/development. ► In silico network reconstruction underlines the structural and functional relationship of the T-cell nucleolar proteome. The nucleolus, site of ribosome biogenesis, is a dynamic subnuclear organelle involved in diverse cellular functions. The size, number and organisation of nucleoli are cell-specific and while it remains to be established, the nucleolar protein composition would be expected to reflect lineage-specific transcriptional regulation of rDNA genes and have cell-type functional components. Here, we describe the first characterisation of the human T-cell nucleolar proteome. Using the Jurkat T-cell line and a reproducible organellar proteomic approach, we identified 872 nucleolar proteins. In addition to ribosome biogenesis and RNA processing networks, network modeling and topological analysis of nucleolar proteome revealed distinct macromolecular complexes known to orchestrate chromatin structure and to contribute to the regulation of gene expression, replication, recombination and repair, and chromosome segregation. Furthermore, among our dataset, we identified proteins known to functionally participate in T-cell biology, including RUNX1, ILF3, ILF2, STAT3, LSH, TCF-1, SATB1, CTCF, HMGB3, BCLAF1, FX4L1, ZAP70, TIAM1, RAC2, THEMIS, LCP1, RPL22, TOPK, RETN, IFI-16, MCT-1, ISG15, and 14-3-3τ, which support cell-specific composition of the Jurkat nucleolus. Subsequently, the nucleolar localisation of RUNX1, ILF3, STAT3, ZAP70 and RAC2 was further validated by Western Blot analysis and immunofluorescence microscopy. Overall, our T-cell nucleolar proteome dataset not only further expands the existing repertoire of the human nucleolar proteome but support a cell type-specific composition of the nucleolus in T cell and highlights the potential roles of the nucleoli in lymphocyte biology.
ISSN:0161-5890
1872-9142
DOI:10.1016/j.molimm.2011.09.005