Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Proteomics. 2021 Jun 15;241:104244. doi: 10.1016/j.jprot.2021.104244. Epub 2021 Apr 23.
Nicotine is a prominent active compound in tobacco and many smoking cessation products. Some of the biological effects of nicotine are well documented in in vitro and in vivo systems; however, data are scarce concerning the time-dependent changes on protein and phosphorylation events in response to nicotine. Here, we profiled the proteomes of SH-SY5Y and A549 cell lines subjected to acute (15 min, 1 h and 4 h) or chronic (24 h, 48 h) nicotine exposures. We used sample multiplexing (TMTpro16) and quantified more than 9000 proteins and over 7000 phosphorylation events per cell line. Among our findings, we determined a decrease in mitochondrial protein abundance for SH-SY5Y, while we detected alterations in several immune pathways, such as the complement system, for A549 following nicotine treatment. We also explored the proposed association between smoking (specifically nicotine) and SARS-CoV2. Here, we found several host proteins known to interact with viral proteins that were affected by nicotine in a time dependent manner. This dataset can be mined further to investigate the potential role of nicotine in different biological contexts. SIGNIFICANCE: Smoking is a major public health issue that is associated with several serious chronic, yet preventable diseases, including stroke, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, cancer, and susceptibility to infection. Tobacco smoke is a complex mixture of thousands of different compounds, among which nicotine is the main addictive compound. The biological effects of nicotine have been reported in several models, however very little data are available concerning the temporal proteomic and phosphoproteomic changes in response to nicotine. Here, we provide a dataset exploring the potential role of nicotine on different biological processes over time, including implications in the study of SARS-CoV2.
尼古丁是烟草和许多戒烟产品中的主要活性化合物。尼古丁的一些生物学效应在体外和体内系统中已有很好的记录;然而,关于尼古丁对蛋白质和磷酸化事件的时间依赖性变化的数据却很少。在这里,我们对暴露于急性(15 分钟、1 小时和 4 小时)或慢性(24 小时、48 小时)尼古丁的 SH-SY5Y 和 A549 细胞系进行了蛋白质组学分析。我们使用了样品多路复用(TMTpro16),对每个细胞系进行了超过 9000 种蛋白质和超过 7000 种磷酸化事件的定量分析。在我们的研究结果中,我们发现 SH-SY5Y 的线粒体蛋白质丰度降低,而在尼古丁处理后,我们检测到 A549 中的几个免疫途径发生改变,如补体系统。我们还探讨了吸烟(特别是尼古丁)与 SARS-CoV2 之间的拟议关联。在这里,我们发现了几个已知与病毒蛋白相互作用的宿主蛋白,这些蛋白的表达受到尼古丁的时间依赖性调节。这个数据集可以进一步挖掘,以研究尼古丁在不同生物学背景下的潜在作用。
吸烟是一个主要的公共卫生问题,与许多严重的慢性但可预防的疾病有关,包括中风、心脏病、2 型糖尿病、癌症和易感染。烟草烟雾是一种由数千种不同化合物组成的复杂混合物,其中尼古丁是主要的成瘾化合物。尼古丁的生物学效应已在几种模型中报道过,然而,关于尼古丁对蛋白质和磷酸化的时间依赖性变化的时间蛋白质组学和磷酸蛋白质组学数据却很少。在这里,我们提供了一个数据集,探索了尼古丁随时间对不同生物学过程的潜在作用,包括在 SARS-CoV2 研究中的意义。