[通过定量磷酸蛋白组学破译响应 17β-estradiol 致死反应的细胞过程]。

Yanan Li, Xiaoyan Liu, Yan Wang, Zhen Liu, Mingliang Ye, Hailin Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

17β-雌二醇(E2)是哺乳动物体内一种重要的内分泌激素,参与调节生殖系统、乳腺、骨骼和心血管系统等的生理功能。令人不解的是,尽管内源性 E2(0.2-1.0 nmol/L)具有生理作用,但大量临床和实验研究表明,大剂量 E2 治疗可导致肿瘤消退,并对多种类型的细胞产生促凋亡作用;然而,其基本机制仍未得到描述。特别是,有关 E2 致死反应的细胞过程的信息很少。在本研究中,我们试图利用定量磷酸化蛋白质组学来描述对高剂量(μmol/L)E2 处理产生反应的细胞过程,从而更好地了解 E2 诱导细胞死亡的调控机制。首先,通过细胞计数试剂盒-8测定(CCK8)、细胞细胞毒性分析(胰蓝染色)和显微镜成像确定了高剂量E2诱导的细胞表型,HeLa细胞经1-10 μmol/L E2或二甲基亚砜(DMSO)处理1-3 d。与 DMSO 处理的 HeLa 细胞相比,用 5 μmol/L E2 处理 2 d 的细胞表现出 >74% 的生长抑制和约 50% 的细胞死亡。因此,这些细胞被用于定量磷酸化蛋白组分析。接下来,我们采用了一种基于固相萃取(SPE)的固定化钛离子亲和层析(Ti4+-IMAC)磷肽富集方法和基于数据独立获取(DIA)的定量蛋白质组学方法,对高剂量E2-调控的磷酸化位点进行了深入筛选,以研究细胞内对高剂量E2处理的反应过程。液相色谱-串联质谱(LC-MS/MS)鉴定了HeLa细胞中受E2和DMSO调控的10000多个磷酸化位点。与 DMSO 处理的细胞相比,5 μmol/L E2 处理的细胞有 537 个磷酸化位点上调,387 个磷酸化位点下调,阈值为 p<0.01,|log2(折叠变化)|≥1。此外,仅在 E2-或 DMSO 处理的细胞样本中发现了 325 个蛋白质上的 453 个不同调控的磷酸化位点。这些磷酸化位点可能会在高剂量 E2 的刺激下发生磷酸化或去磷酸化,因此也进行了平行的富集分析。总之,741 个蛋白质上的 1218 个磷酸化位点受到高剂量 E2 处理的显著调控。然后利用基因本体(GO)和基因组富集分析(GSEA)以及京都基因组百科全书(KEGG)通路数据库对这两组中的功能性磷酸化蛋白进行了分析,以确定它们参与的生物学过程。与细胞表型数据一致,细胞周期相关蛋白在两组E2-调控磷酸化蛋白中高度富集(p<0.05),表明高剂量E2处理可调控细胞增殖。此外,E2-调节的磷酸蛋白高度富集于核糖体生物发生、核胞浆转运和信使核糖核酸(mRNA)加工/剪接等细胞过程中(p<0.05),表明这些过程的激活可能有助于高剂量E2-诱导的细胞死亡。这些结果进一步证实,大剂量 E2 处理会抑制蛋白质翻译并诱导细胞死亡。此外,与表皮生长因子受体(EGFR)和丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPKs)MAPK1、MAPK4 和 MAPK14 相关的多个磷酸化位点在大剂量 E2 的作用下明显上调,这表明 EGFR 和 MAPK 信号通路可能参与了 E2-诱导细胞死亡的调控。这些磷酸化位点可能在E2-诱导的HeLa细胞死亡中起着至关重要的作用。总之,我们的磷酸化蛋白质组数据可能是揭示 E2 在微摩尔范围内调控机制的宝贵资源。
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[Deciphering cellular processes responding to lethality of 17β-estradiol by quantitative phosphoproteomics].
17β-Estradiol (E2), an important endocrine hormone in the mammalian body, participates in the regulation of the physiological functions of the reproductive system, mammary glands, bone, and cardiovascular system, among others. Paradoxically, despite the physiological actions of endogenous E2 (0.2-1.0 nmol/L), numerous clinical and experimental studies have demonstrated that high-dose E2 treatment can cause tumor regression and exert pro-apoptotic actions in multiple cell types; however, the underlying mechanism remains undescribed. In particular, little information of the cellular processes responding to the lethality of E2 is available. In the present study, we attempted to characterize the cellular processes responding to high-dose (μmol/L) E2 treatment using quantitative phosphoproteomics to obtain a better understanding of the regulatory mechanism of E2-induced cell death. First, the cell phenotype induced by high-dose E2 was determined by performing Cell Counting Kit-8 assay (CCK8), cell cytotoxicity analysis by trypan blue staining, and microscopic imaging on HeLa cells treated with 1-10 μmol/L E2 or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) for 1-3 d. E2 inhibited cell proliferation and induced cell death in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Compared with the DMSO-treated HeLa cells, the cells treated with 5 μmol/L E2 for 2 d demonstrated >74% growth inhibition and approximately 50% cell death. Thus, these cells were used for quantitative phosphoproteomic analysis. Next, a solid-phase extraction (SPE)-based immobilized titanium ion affinity chromatography (Ti4+-IMAC) phosphopeptide-enrichment method coupled with data-independent acquisition (DIA)-based quantitative proteomics was employed for the in-depth screening of high-dose E2-regulated phosphorylation sites to investigate the intracellular processes responding to high-dose E2 treatment. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) identified over 10000 phosphorylation sites regulated by E2 and DMSO in HeLa cells. In comparison with the DMSO-treated cells, the cells treated with 5 μmol/L E2 showed 537 upregulated phosphorylation sites and 387 downregulated phosphorylation sites, with a threshold of p<0.01 and |log2(fold change)|≥1. A total of 924 phosphorylation sites on 599 proteins were significantly regulated by high-dose E2, and these sites were subjected to enrichment analysis. In addition, 453 differently regulated phosphorylation sites on 325 proteins were identified only in the E2- or DMSO-treated cell samples. These phosphorylation sites may be phosphorylated or dephosphorylated in response to high-dose E2 stimulation and were subjected to parallel enrichment analyses. Taken together, 1218 phosphorylation sites on 741 proteins were significantly regulated by high-dose E2 treatment. The functional phosphoproteins in these two groups were then analyzed using Gene Ontology (GO) and Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) to determine the biological processes in which they participate and the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway database. Consistent with the cell-phenotype data, cell cycle-related proteins were highly enriched in the two groups of E2-regulated phosphoproteins (p<0.05), indicating that high-dose E2 treatment can regulate cell proliferation. In addition, E2-regulated phosphoproteins were highly enriched in the cellular processes of ribosome biogenesis, nucleocytoplasmic transport, and messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) processing/splicing (p<0.05), indicating that the activation of these processes may contribute to high-dose E2-induced cell death. These results further confirm that high-dose E2 treatment inhibits protein translation and induces cell death. Furthermore, the significant upregulation of multiple phosphorylation sites associated with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) MAPK1, MAPK4, and MAPK14 by high-dose E2 indicates that the EGFR and MAPK signaling pathways are likely involved in the regulation of E2-induced cell death. These phosphorylation sites likely play vital roles in E2-induced cell death in HeLa cells. Overall, our phosphoproteomic data could be a valuable resource for uncovering the regulatory mechanisms of E2 in the micromolar range.
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