Proteomics

Dataset Information

0

Pig Tooth Pixelation - Tooth enamel forms in an ephemeral protein matrix where changes in protein abundance, composition and post-translational modifications are critical to achieve healthy enamel properties


ABSTRACT: Tooth enamel forms in an ephemeral protein matrix where changes in protein abundance, composition and post-translational modifications are critical to achieve healthy enamel properties. Amelogenin (AMELX) with its splice variants is the most abundant enamel matrix protein, with only one known phosphorylation site at serine 16 shown in vitro to be critical for regulating mineralization. The phosphorylated form of AMELX stabilizes amorphous calcium phosphate, while crystalline hydroxyapatite forms in the presence of the unphosphorylated protein. While it is necessary to our understanding of how AMELX regulates mineral transitions over space and time, it is unknown whether and when un-phosphorylated amleogenin occurs during enamel mineralization. This study aims to reveal the spatiotemporal distribution of the most abundant AMLEX splice variants including the full length P173, the shorter leucine-rich amelogenin protein (LRAP), and the exon 4-containing P190 in forming enamel, all within the context of the changing enamel matrix proteome during mineralization. We microsampled permanent pig molars, capturing known stages of enamel formation from both crown surface and inner enamel. Nano-LC-MS/MS proteomic analyses after tryptic digestion rendered more than 500 unique protein identifications in enamel, dentin, and bone. We mapped collagens, keratins, and proteolytic enzymes (CTSL, MMP2, MMP10) and determined distributions of P173, LRAP and P190, the enamel proteins enamelin (ENAM) and ameloblastin (AMBN), and matrix-metalloprotease-20 (MMP20) and kallikrein-4 (KLK4). All enamel proteins and KLK4 were near-exclusive to enamel and in excellent agreement with published expression levels. Phosphorylated P173 and LRAP decreased in abundance from recently deposited matrix towards older enamel, mirrored by increasing abundances of testicular acid phosphatase (ACPT). Our results showed that hierarchical clustering analysis of secretory enamel links closely matching distributions of unphosphorylated P173 and LRAP with ACPT and nontraditional amelogenesis proteins, many associated with enamel defects. We report higher protein diversity than previously published and Gene Ontology (GO)-defined protein functions related to the regulation of mineral formation in secretory enamel (e.g. casein α-S1, CSN1S1), immune response in erupted enamel (e.g. peptidoglycan recognition protein, PGRP), and phosphorylation. This study presents a novel approach to characterize and study functional relationships through spatiotemporal mapping of the ephemeral extracellular matrix proteome.

INSTRUMENT(S): Orbitrap Fusion

ORGANISM(S): Sus Scrofa Domesticus (domestic Pig)

TISSUE(S): Tooth

SUBMITTER: Markus Hardt  

LAB HEAD: Markus Hardt

PROVIDER: PXD013604 | Pride | 2019-07-19

REPOSITORIES: Pride

Dataset's files

Source:
Action DRS
20171201_m3_1a_pig.mzxml Mzxml
20171201_m3_1c_pig.mzxml Mzxml
20171201_m3_2a_pig.mzxml Mzxml
20171201_m3_2b_pig.mzxml Mzxml
20171201_m3_2c_pig.mzxml Mzxml
Items per page:
1 - 5 of 21

Similar Datasets

2020-06-24 | PXD017965 | Pride
2020-08-31 | GSE155641 | GEO
2023-08-03 | GSE235869 | GEO
2022-04-05 | GSE199982 | GEO
2023-10-01 | GSE239863 | GEO
2019-09-11 | PXD011008 | Pride
2019-11-12 | PXD013838 | Pride
2019-11-05 | PXD012587 | Pride
2010-10-01 | E-MTAB-149 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2020-04-02 | PXD014342 | Pride