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https://doi.org/10.1021/pr500754j
Title: | iTRAQ Quantitative Clinical Proteomics Revealed Role of Na+K+-ATPase and Its Correlation with Deamidation in Vascular Dementia | Authors: | Adav, Sunil S Qian, Jingru Ang, Yi Lin Kalaria, Raj N Lai, Mitchell KP Chen, Christopher P Sze, Sin Kwan |
Keywords: | Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Biochemical Research Methods Biochemistry & Molecular Biology dementia Na plus /K plus -ATPase ion channel proteins iTRAQ mass spectrometry ASPARTYL PROTEIN METHYLTRANSFERASE LONG-TERM POTENTIATION ENERGY TRANSDUCTION MASS-SPECTROMETRY CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE PEPTIDES REPAIR NA+,K+-ATPASE RECOGNITION NA,K-ATPASE |
Issue Date: | 1-Nov-2014 | Publisher: | AMER CHEMICAL SOC | Citation: | Adav, Sunil S, Qian, Jingru, Ang, Yi Lin, Kalaria, Raj N, Lai, Mitchell KP, Chen, Christopher P, Sze, Sin Kwan (2014-11-01). iTRAQ Quantitative Clinical Proteomics Revealed Role of Na+K+-ATPase and Its Correlation with Deamidation in Vascular Dementia. JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH 13 (11) : 4635-4646. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1021/pr500754j | Abstract: | Dementia is a major public health burden characterized by impaired cognition and loss of function. There are limited treatment options due to inadequate understanding of its pathophysiology and underlying causative mechanisms. Discovery-driven iTRAQ-based quantitative proteomics techniques were applied on frozen brain samples to profile the proteome from vascular dementia (VaD) and age-matched nondementia controls to elucidate the perturbed pathways contributing to pathophysiology of VaD. The iTRAQ quantitative data revealed significant up-regulation of protein-l-isoaspartate O-methyltransferase and sodium-potassium transporting ATPase, while post-translational modification analysis suggested deamidation of catalytic and regulatory subunits of sodium-potassium transporting ATPase. Spontaneous protein deamidation of labile asparagines, generating abnormal l-isoaspartyl residues, is associated with cell aging and dementia due to Alzheimers disease and may be a cause of neurodegeneration. As ion channel proteins play important roles in cellular signaling processes, alterations in their function by deamidation may lead to perturbations in membrane excitability and neuronal function. Structural modeling of sodium-potassium transporting ATPase revealed the close proximity of these deamidated residues to the catalytic site during E P confirmation. The deamidated residues may disrupt electrostatic interaction during E phosphorylation, which may affect ion transport and signal transduction. Our findings suggest impaired regulation and compromised activity of ion channel proteins contribute to the pathophysiology of VaD. 2 1 | Source Title: | JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/188480 | ISSN: | 15353893 15353907 |
DOI: | 10.1021/pr500754j |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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