Large-scale, ion-current-based proteomics investigation of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients

C Tu, MJ Mammen, J Li, X Shen, X Jiang… - Journal of proteome …, 2014 - ACS Publications
Journal of proteome research, 2014ACS Publications
Proteomic analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) in chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD) patients may provide new biomarkers and deeper understanding of the
disease mechanisms but remains challenging. Here we describe an ion-current-based
strategy for comparative analysis of BALF proteomes from patients with moderate and stable
COPD versus healthy controls. The strategy includes an efficient preparation procedure
providing quantitative recovery and a nano-LC/MS analysis with a long, heated column …
Proteomic analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients may provide new biomarkers and deeper understanding of the disease mechanisms but remains challenging. Here we describe an ion-current-based strategy for comparative analysis of BALF proteomes from patients with moderate and stable COPD versus healthy controls. The strategy includes an efficient preparation procedure providing quantitative recovery and a nano-LC/MS analysis with a long, heated column. Under optimized conditions, high efficiency and reproducibility were achieved for each step, enabling a “20-plex” comparison of clinical subjects (n = 10/group). Without depletion/fractionation, a total of 423 unique protein groups were quantified under stringent criteria with at least two quantifiable peptides. Seventy-six proteins were determined as significantly altered in COPD, which represent a diversity of biological processes such as alcohol metabolic process, gluconeogenesis/glycolysis, inflammatory response, proteolysis, and oxidation reduction. Interestingly, altered alcohol metabolism responding to oxidant stress is a novel observation in COPD. The prominently elevated key enzymes involved in alcohol metabolism (e.g., ADH1B, ALDH2, and ALDH3A1) may provide a reasonable explanation for a bewildering observation in COPD patients known for decades: the underestimation of the blood alcohol concentrations through breath tests. These discoveries could provide new insights for identifying novel biomarkers and pathological mediators in clinical studies.
ACS Publications