The pathogenesis of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS CoV) is an important issue for treatment and prevention of SARS. Previously, SARS CoV 3C-like protease (3CLpro) has been demonstrated to induce apoptosis via the activation of caspase-3 and caspase-9 (Lin, C. W., Lin, K. H., Hsieh, T. H., Shiu, S. Y. et al., FEMS Immunol. Med. Microbiol. 2006, 46, 375-380). In this study, proteome analysis of the human promonocyte HL-CZ cells expressing SARS CoV 3CLpro was performed using 2-DE and nanoscale capillary LC/ESI quadrupole-TOF MS. Functional classification of identified up-regulated proteins indicated that protein metabolism and modification, particularly in the ubiquitin proteasome pathway, was the main biological process occurring in SARS CoV 3CLpro-expressing cells. Thirty-six percent of identified up-regulated proteins were located in the mitochondria, including apoptosis-inducing factor, ATP synthase beta chain and cytochrome c oxidase. Interestingly, heat shock cognate 71-kDa protein (HSP70), which antagonizes apoptosis-inducing factor was shown to down-regulate and had a 5.29-fold decrease. In addition, confocal image analysis has shown release of mitochondrial apoptogenic apoptosis-inducing factor and cytochrome c into the cytosol. Our results revealed that SARS CoV 3CLpro could be considered to induce mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis. The study provides system-level insights into the interaction of SARS CoV 3CLpro with host cells, which will be helpful in elucidating the molecular basis of SARS CoV pathogenesis.
The purpose of this work is to differentiate between the Human papillomaviruses 18 positive (HPV18+) and negative (HPV18-) oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCC) in oral cancer patients with cancer-associated oral habits (betel quid chewing, cigarette smoking, and alcohol drinking). Both gene and protein expression profiles of HPV18+ and HPV18- OSCC were compared: we then further explored the biological effect of HPV in oral cancer. Suppression subtraction hybridization (SSH), clinical proteomics analysis, and immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining were carried out in the HPV18+ and HPV18- OSCC groups. HPV typing detection revealed that 11 OSCC tissues from 82 patients were positive for HPV18. The SSH experiment showed that 4 cancer-associated genes were highly transcribed within 11 cDNA libraries of HPV18+ OSCC, including poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase I (PARP1), replication protein A2 (RPA2), S100A8, and S100A2. Clinical proteomics analysis indicated that there was over 10-fold overexpression of Stratifin, F-actin capping protein alpha-1 subunit (CapZ alpha-1), Apolipoprotein A-1 (ApoA-1), Heat-shock protein 27 (HSP27), Arginase-1, p16INK4A, and S100 calcium-binding protein A8 (S100A8) in HPV18+ OSCC. Interestingly, the results from SSH and protemics analysis showed that S100A8 was overexpressed in HPV18+ OSCC. Moreover, IHC staining demonstrated that S100A8 was up-regulated in HPV18+ OSCC tissues. Our results suggest that S100A8 plays an important role in oral carcinogenesis following HPV18 infection; therefore, S100A8 may be a powerful biomarker of HPV18 as well as a potential therapeutic target for HPV18+ OSCC patients. The study is the first to identify S100A8 as a biomarker in HPV-associated cancer. Furthermore, this is also the first study to discover a biomarker by combining SSH, clinical proteomics, and IHC stain analysis in oral cancer-associated research.
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