Protein Biomarkers and Neuroproteomics Characterization of Microvesicles/Exosomes from Human Cerebrospinal Fluid Following Traumatic Brain Injury

被引:0
作者
Rachna Manek
Ahmed Moghieb
Zhihui Yang
Dhwani Kumar
Firas Kobessiy
George Anis Sarkis
Vijaya Raghavan
Kevin K.W. Wang
机构
[1] University of Florida,Program for Neurotrauma, Neuroproteomics & Biomarkers Research, Department of Emergency Medicine
[2] University of Florida,The Departments of Psychiatry
[3] Pacific Northwest National Laboratory,Department of Chemistry
[4] American University of Beirut,The Department of Neuroscience
[5] Alexandria University,Department of Chemistry
[6] Schizophrenia Research Foundation,undefined
[7] University of Florida,undefined
[8] University of Florida,undefined
来源
Molecular Neurobiology | 2018年 / 55卷
关键词
Traumatic brain injury; Biomarkers; Neuronal injury; Glial injury; Systems biology; Exosome; Microvesicles;
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学科分类号
摘要
Recently, there have been emerging interests in the area of microvesicles and exosome (MV/E) released from brain cells in relation to neurodegenerative diseases. However, only limited studies focused on MV/E released post-traumatic brain injury (TBI) as they highlight on the mechanistic roles of released proteins. This study sought to examine if CSF samples from severe TBI patients contain MV/E with unique protein contents. First, nanoparticle tracking analysis determined MV/E from TBI have a mode of 74–98 nm in diameter, while control CSF MV/E have a mode of 99–104 nm. Also, there are more MV/E were isolated from TBI CSF (27.8–33.6 × 108/mL) than from control CSF (13.1–18.5 × 108/mL). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) visualization also confirmed characteristic MV/E morphology. Using targeted immunoblotting approach, we observed the presence of several known TBI biomarkers such as αII-spectrin breakdown products (BDPs), GFAP, and its BDPs and UCH-L1 in higher concentrations in MV/E from TBI CSF than their counterparts from control CSF. Furthermore, we found presynaptic terminal protein synaptophysin and known exosome marker Alix enriched in MV/E from human TBI CSF. In parallel, we conducted nRPLC-tandem mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis of two control and two TBI CSF samples. Ninety-one proteins were identified with high confidence in MV/E from control CSF, whereas 466 proteins were identified in the counterpart from TBI CSF. MV/E isolated from human CSF contain cytoskeletal proteins, neurite-outgrowth related proteins, and synaptic proteins, extracellular matrix proteins, and complement protein C1q subcomponent subunit B. Taken together, following severe TBI, the injured human brain released increased number of extracellular microvesicles/exosomes (MV/E) into CSF. These TBI MV/E contain several known TBI biomarkers and previously undescribed brain protein markers. It is also possible that such TBI-specific MV/E might contain cell to cell communication factors related to both cell death signaling a well as neurodegeneration pathways.
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页码:6112 / 6128
页数:16
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