Wong MK, Sze KH, Chen T, Cho CK, Law HC, Chu IK, Wong AO. Goldfish spexin: solution structure and novel function as a satiety factor in feeding control.
BackgroundSiamese fighting fish Betta splendens are notorious for their aggressiveness and accordingly have been widely used to study aggression. However, the lack of a reference genome has, to date, limited the understanding of the genetic basis of aggression in this species. Here, we present the first reference genome assembly of the Siamese fighting fish.FindingsFrist, we sequenced and de novo assembled a 465.24-Mb genome for the B. splendens variety Giant, with a weighted average (N50) scaffold size of 949.03 Kb and an N50 contig size of 19.01 Kb, covering 99.93% of the estimated genome size. To obtain a chromosome-level genome assembly, we constructed one Hi-C library and sequenced 75.24 Gb reads using the BGISEQ-500 platform. We anchored approximately 93% of the scaffold sequences into 21 chromosomes and evaluated the quality of our assembly using the high-contact frequency heat map and Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs. We also performed comparative chromosome analyses between Oryzias latipes and B. splendens, revealing a chromosome conservation evolution in B. splendens. We predicted 23,981 genes assisted by RNA-sequencing data generated from brain, liver, muscle, and heart tissues of Giant and annotated 15% repetitive sequences in the genome. Additionally, we resequenced five other B. splendens varieties and detected ∼3.4 M single-nucleotide variations and 27,305 insertions and deletions.ConclusionsWe provide the first chromosome-level genome for the Siamese fighting fish. The genome will lay a valuable foundation for future research on aggression in B. splendens.
Purpose: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly metastatic disease that can be separated into distinct subtypes based on molecular signatures. Identifying PDAC subtype-specific therapeutic vulnerabilities is necessary to develop precision medicine approaches to treat PDAC. Experimental Design: A total of 56 PDAC liver metastases were obtained from the UNMC Rapid Autopsy Program and analyzed with quantitative proteomics. PDAC subtypes were identified by principal component analysis based on protein expression profiling. Proteomic subtypes were further characterized by the associated clinical information, including but not limited to survival analysis, drug treatment response, and smoking and drinking status. Results: Over 3,960 proteins were identified and used to delineate four distinct PDAC microenvironment subtypes: (i) metabolic; (ii) progenitor-like; (iii) proliferative; and (iv) inflammatory. PDAC risk factors of alcohol and tobacco consumption correlate with subtype classifications. Enhanced survival is observed in FOLFIRINOX treated metabolic and progenitor-like subtypes compared with the proliferative and inflammatory subtypes. In addition, TYMP, PDCD6IP, ERAP1, and STMN showed significant association with patient survival in a subtype-specific manner. Gemcitabine-induced alterations in the proteome identify proteins, such as serine hydroxymethyltransferase 1, associated with drug resistance. Conclusions: These data demonstrate that proteomic analysis of clinical PDAC liver metastases can identify molecular signatures unique to disease subtypes and point to opportunities for therapeutic development to improve the treatment of PDAC.
A novel fully automatable two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2DLC) platform has been integrated into a modified commercial off-the-shelf LC instrument, incorporating porous graphitic carbon (PGC) separation and conventional low-pH reversed-phase (RP) separation for both proteomics and N-glycomics analyses; the dual-trap column configuration of this platform offers desirable high-throughput analyses with almost no idle time, in addition to a miniaturized setup and simplified operation. The total run time per analysis was only 19 h when using eight PGC fractions for unattended large-scale qualitative and quantitative proteomic analyses; the identification of 2678 nonredundant proteins and 11,984 unique peptides provided one of the most comprehensive proteome data sets for primary cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs). The effect of pH on the PGC column was investigated for the first time to improve the hydrophobic peptide coverage; the performance of the optimized system was first benchmarked using tryptic digests of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell lysates and then evaluated through duplicate analyses of Macaca fascicularis cerebral cortex lysates using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) technology. An additional plug-and-play PGC module functioned in a complementary manner to recover unretained hydrophilic solutes from the low-pH RP column; synchronization of the fractionations between the PGC-RP system and the PGC module facilitated simultaneous analyses of hydrophobic and hydrophilic compounds from a single sample injection event. This methodology was applied to perform, for the first time, detailed glycomics analyses of Macaca fascicularis plasma, resulting in the identification of a total 130 N-glycosylated plasma proteins, 705 N-glycopeptides, and 254 N-glycosylation sites.
Melanoma is an aggressive form of skin cancer that is curable by surgical excision in the majority of cases, if detected at an early stage. To improve early stage melanoma detection, the development of a highly sensitive diagnostic test is of utmost importance. Here we aimed to identify antibodies to a panel of tumour associated antigens that can differentiate primary melanoma patients and healthy individuals. A total of 245 sera from primary melanoma patients and healthy volunteers were screened against a high-throughput microarray platform containing 1627 functional proteins. Following rigorous statistical analysis, we identified a combination of 10 autoantibody biomarkers that, as a panel, displays a sensitivity of 79%, specificity of 84% and an AUC of 0.828 for primary melanoma detection. This melanoma autoantibody signature may prove valuable for the development of a diagnostic blood test for routine population screening that, when used in conjunction with current melanoma diagnostic techniques, could improve the early diagnosis of this malignancy and ultimately decrease the mortality rate of patients.
In this study, we observed unprecedented cleavages of the Cβ–Cγ bonds of tryptophan residue side chains in a series of hydrogen-deficient tryptophan-containing peptide radical cations (M•+) during low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID). We used CID experiments and theoretical density functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the mechanism of this bond cleavage, which forms [M – 116]+ ions. The formation of an α-carbon radical intermediate at the tryptophan residue for the subsequent Cβ–Cγ bond cleavage is analogous to that occurring at leucine residues, producing the same product ions; this hypothesis was supported by the identical product ion spectra of [LGGGH – 43]+ and [WGGGH – 116]+, obtained from the CID of [LGGGH]•+ and [WGGGH]•+, respectively. Elimination of the neutral 116-Da radical requires inevitable dehydrogenation of the indole nitrogen atom, leaving the radical centered formally on the indole nitrogen atom ([Ind]•-2), in agreement with the CID data for [WGGGH]•+ and [W1-CH3GGGH]•+; replacing the tryptophan residue with a 1-methyltryptophan residue results in a change of the base peak from that arising from a neutral radical loss (116 Da) to that arising from a molecule loss (131 Da), both originating from Cβ–Cγ bond cleavage. Hydrogen atom transfer or proton transfer to the γ-carbon atom of the tryptophan residue weakens the Cβ–Cγ bond and, therefore, decreases the dissociation energy barrier dramatically.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s13361-011-0295-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
An automatable, robust, high-performance online multidimensional liquid chromatography (MDLC) platform comprising of pH 10 reversed-phase (RP), strong cation exchange (SCX), and pH 2 RP separation stages has been integrated into a modified commercial off-the-shelf LC instrument with a simple rewiring, enabling accelerated routine qualitative and quantitative proteomics analyses. This system has been redesigned with a dual-trap column configuration to improve the throughput by greatly decreasing the system idle time. The performance of this new design has been benchmarked through analysis of the total lysate of S. cerevisiae, in comparison with that of the former tailor-made system featuring more complicated components; the total run time per "load-and-go" LC/MS analysis was approximately 24 h, with minimal idle time and no labor-intensive steps. This platform features high-resolution fractionations, ease of use and a high degree of user programmability in the first two chromatographic dimensions, allowing flexible and effective sampling with (RP-SCX-RP) or without (RP-RP) the inclusion of SCX sub-fractionation; good proteome coverage and reproducibility was demonstrated through the analyses of bacterial, cell culture, and monkey brain tissue proteomes. The viability of the 3D RP-SCX-RP has been proven in proteome-wide studies of STO fibroblasts and yeast tryptic digests, resulting in extended proteome and protein coverages with high reproducibility-in particular, discovering extra-hydrophilic peptides-at the expense of the acquisition time. The identified inventory of the rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cell proteome-a total of 6345 proteins and 97 309 unique peptides is the most comprehensive dataset to date-provides an example of the value of the 3D RP-SCX-RP. The use of orthogonal chromatographic dimensions in the 3D RP-SCX-RP also circumvents the issues of isobaric interference of mass-tagging background contaminations, while significantly improving the accuracy of isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ)-based protein quantitation experiments.
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