Functional proteomic analysis of corticosteroid pharmacodynamics in rat liver: Relationship to hepatic stress, signaling, energy regulation, and drug metabolism

被引:23
作者
Ayyar, Vivaswath S. [1 ]
Almon, Richard R. [1 ,2 ]
DuBois, Debra C. [1 ,2 ]
Sukumaran, Siddharth [1 ]
Qu, Jun [1 ]
Jusko, William J. [1 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Buffalo, Dept Pharmaceut Sci, Buffalo, NY USA
[2] SUNY Buffalo, Dept Biol Sci, Buffalo, NY USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Methylprednisolone; Liver; Pharmacoproteomics; Functional proteomics; Pharmacodynamics; 11-BETA-HYDROXYSTEROID DEHYDROGENASE TYPE-1; GLUTAMINE-SYNTHETASE EXPRESSION; CREATINE-KINASE ACTIVITY; GLUCOCORTICOID-RECEPTOR; TRYPTOPHAN 2,3-DIOXYGENASE; CIRCADIAN-RHYTHMS; SKELETAL-MUSCLE; GENE-EXPRESSION; QUANTITATIVE PROTEOMICS; MICROARRAY ANALYSIS;
D O I
10.1016/j.jprot.2017.03.007
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Corticosteroids (CS) are anti-inflammatory agents that cause extensive pharmacogenomic and proteomic changes in multiple tissues. An understanding of the proteome-wide effects of CS in liver and its relationships to altered hepatic and systemic physiology remains incomplete. Here, we report the application of a functional pharmacoproteomic approach to gain integrated insight into the complex nature of CS responses in liver in vivo. An in-depth functional analysis was performed using rich pharmacodynamic (temporal-based) proteomic data measured over 66 h in rat liver following a single dose of methylprednisolone (MPL). Data mining identified 451 differentially regulated proteins. These proteins were analyzed on the basis of temporal regulation, cellular localization, and literature-mined functional information. Of the 451 proteins, 378 were clustered into six functional groups based on major clinically-relevant effects of CS in liver. MPL-responsive proteins were highly localized in the mitochondria (20%) and cytosol (24%). Interestingly, several proteins were related to hepatic stress and signaling processes, which appear to be involved in secondary signaling cascades and in protecting the liver from CS-induced oxidative damage. Consistent with known adverse metabolic effects of CS, several rate controlling enzymes involved in amino acid metabolism, gluconeogenesis, and fatty-acid metabolism were altered by MPL. In addition, proteins involved in the metabolism of endogenous compounds, xenobiotics, and therapeutic drugs including cytochrome P450 and Phase-II enzymes were differentially regulated. Proteins related to the inflammatory acute-phase response were up-regulated in response to MPL. Functionally-similar proteins showed large diversity in their temporal profiles, indicating complex mechanisms of regulation by CS. Significance: Clinical use of corticosteroid (CS) therapy is frequent and chronic. However, current knowledge on the proteome-level effects of CS in liver and other tissues is sparse. While transcriptomic regulation following methylprednisolone (MPL) dosing has been temporally examined in rat liver, proteomic assessments are needed to better characterize the tissue-specific functional aspects of MPL actions. This study describes a functional pharmacoproteomic analysis of dynamic changes in MPL-regulated proteins in liver and provides biological insight into how steroid-induced perturbations on a molecular level may relate to both adverse and therapeutic responses presented clinically. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:84 / 105
页数:22
相关论文
共 121 条
[1]   REGULATION OF THE CYTOSOLIC ASPARTATE-AMINOTRANSFERASE HOUSEKEEPING GENE PROMOTER BY GLUCOCORTICOIDS, CAMP, AND INSULIN [J].
AGGERBECK, M ;
GARLATTI, M ;
FEILLEUXDUCHE, S ;
VEYSSIER, C ;
DAHESHIA, M ;
HANOUNE, J ;
BAROUKI, R .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1993, 32 (35) :9065-9072
[2]   Serpin B3/B4, activated by STAT3, promote survival of squamous carcinoma cells [J].
Ahmed, Simi T. ;
Darnell, James E., Jr. .
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2009, 378 (04) :821-825
[3]   Microarray analysis of the temporal response of skeletal muscle to methylprednisolone: comparative analysis of two dosing regimens [J].
Almon, Richard R. ;
DuBois, Debra C. ;
Yao, Zhenling ;
Hoffman, Eric P. ;
Ghimbovschi, Svetlana ;
Jusko, William J. .
PHYSIOLOGICAL GENOMICS, 2007, 30 (03) :282-299
[4]   A microarray analysis of the temporal response of liver to methylprednisolone: A comparative analysis of two dosing regimens [J].
Almon, Richard R. ;
DuBois, Debra C. ;
Jusko, William J. .
ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2007, 148 (05) :2209-2225
[5]   Pharmacogenomic responses of rat liver to methylprednisolone: An approach to mining a rich microarray time series [J].
Almon, RR ;
Dubois, DC ;
Jin, JY ;
Jusko, WJ .
AAPS JOURNAL, 2005, 7 (01) :E156-E194
[6]   Corticosteroid-regulated genes in rat kidney: mining time series array data [J].
Almon, RR ;
Lai, W ;
DuBois, DC ;
Jusko, WJ .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 2005, 289 (05) :E870-E882
[7]   The genomic response of skeletal muscle to methylprednisolone using microarrays: tailoring data mining to the structure of the pharmacogenomic time series [J].
Almon, RR ;
DuBois, DC ;
Piel, WH ;
Jusko, WJ .
PHARMACOGENOMICS, 2004, 5 (05) :525-552
[8]   In vivo multi-tissue corticosteroid microarray time series available online at Public Expression Profile Resource (PEPR) [J].
Almon, RR ;
Chen, J ;
Snyder, G ;
DuBois, DC ;
Jusko, WJ ;
Hoffman, EP .
PHARMACOGENOMICS, 2003, 4 (06) :791-799
[9]   UGT1A1 genotypes and glucuronidation of SN-38, the active metabolite of irinotecan [J].
Ando, Y ;
Saka, H ;
Asai, G ;
Sugiura, S ;
Shimokata, K ;
Kamataki, T .
ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 1998, 9 (08) :845-847
[10]   Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biology [J].
Ashburner, M ;
Ball, CA ;
Blake, JA ;
Botstein, D ;
Butler, H ;
Cherry, JM ;
Davis, AP ;
Dolinski, K ;
Dwight, SS ;
Eppig, JT ;
Harris, MA ;
Hill, DP ;
Issel-Tarver, L ;
Kasarskis, A ;
Lewis, S ;
Matese, JC ;
Richardson, JE ;
Ringwald, M ;
Rubin, GM ;
Sherlock, G .
NATURE GENETICS, 2000, 25 (01) :25-29