Olszowy Pawel, Donnelly Maire Rose, Lee Chanho, Ciborowski Pawel
Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198-5880 USA ; Department of Environmental Chemistry and Bioanalytics, Faculty of Chemistry, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Gagarin 7 Street, 87-100 Torun, Poland.
Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198-5880 USA.
Proteome Sci. 2015 Sep 24;13:24. doi: 10.1186/s12953-015-0080-7. eCollection 2015.
Histones and their post-translational modifications impact cellular function by acting as key regulators in the maintenance and remodeling of chromatin, thus affecting transcription regulation either positively (activation) or negatively (repression). In this study we describe a comprehensive, bottom-up proteomics approach to profiling post-translational modifications (acetylation, mono-, di- and tri-methylation, phosphorylation, biotinylation, ubiquitination, citrullination and ADP-ribosylation) in human macrophages, which are primary cells of the innate immune system. As our knowledge expands, it becomes more evident that macrophages are a heterogeneous population with potentially subtle differences in their responses to various stimuli driven by highly complex epigenetic regulatory mechanisms.
To profile post-translational modifications (PTMs) of histones in macrophages we used two platforms of liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. One platform was based on Sciex5600 TripleTof and the second one was based on VelosPro Orbitrap Elite ETD mass spectrometers.
We provide side-by-side comparison of profiling using two mass spectrometric platforms, ion trap and qTOF, coupled with the application of collisional induced and electron transfer dissociation. We show for the first time methylation of a His residue in macrophages and demonstrate differences in histone PTMs between those currently reported for macrophage cell lines and what we identified in primary cells. We have found a relatively low level of histone PTMs in differentiated but resting human primary monocyte derived macrophages.
This study is the first comprehensive profiling of histone PTMs in primary human MDM. Our study implies that epigenetic regulatory mechanisms operative in transformed cell lines and primary cells are overlapping to a limited extent. Our mass spectrometric approach provides groundwork for the investigation of how histone PTMs contribute to epigenetic regulation in primary human macrophages.
组蛋白及其翻译后修饰作为染色质维持和重塑的关键调节因子,影响细胞功能,从而对转录调控产生正向(激活)或负向(抑制)影响。在本研究中,我们描述了一种全面的、自下而上的蛋白质组学方法,用于分析人类巨噬细胞(先天免疫系统的原代细胞)中的翻译后修饰(乙酰化、单甲基化、二甲基化、三甲基化、磷酸化、生物素化、泛素化、瓜氨酸化和ADP-核糖基化)。随着我们知识的扩展,越来越明显的是,巨噬细胞是一个异质性群体,在由高度复杂的表观遗传调控机制驱动的对各种刺激的反应中可能存在细微差异。
为了分析巨噬细胞中组蛋白的翻译后修饰(PTM),我们使用了液相色谱和质谱的两个平台。一个平台基于Sciex5600 TripleTof,另一个基于VelosPro Orbitrap Elite ETD质谱仪。
我们对使用离子阱和qTOF这两种质谱平台进行分析进行了并列比较,并应用了碰撞诱导解离和电子转移解离。我们首次展示了巨噬细胞中组氨酸残基的甲基化,并证明了目前报道的巨噬细胞系与我们在原代细胞中鉴定的组蛋白PTM之间的差异。我们发现分化但静止的人类原代单核细胞衍生巨噬细胞中的组蛋白PTM水平相对较低。
本研究是首次对原代人MDM中的组蛋白PTM进行全面分析。我们的研究表明,在转化细胞系和原代细胞中起作用的表观遗传调控机制在有限程度上重叠。我们的质谱方法为研究组蛋白PTM如何促进原代人类巨噬细胞中的表观遗传调控奠定了基础。