A proteomic atlas of kidney amyloidosis provides insights into disease pathogenesis

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
The mechanisms of tissue damage in kidney amyloidosis are not well described. To investigate this further, we used laser microdissection-mass spectrometry to identify proteins deposited in amyloid plaques (expanded proteome) and proteins overexpressed in plaques compared to controls (plaque-specific proteome). This study encompassed 2650 cases of amyloidosis due to light chain (AL), heavy chain (AH), leukocyte chemotactic factor2-type (ALECT2), secondary (AA), fibrinogen (AFib), apo AIV (AApoAIV), apo CII (AApoCII) and 14 normal/disease controls. We found that AFib, AA, and AApoCII have the most distinct proteomes predominantly driven by increased complement pathway proteins. Clustering of cases based on the expanded proteome identified two ALECT2 and seven AL subtypes. The main differences within the AL and ALECT2 subtypes were driven by complement proteins and, for AL only, 14-3-3 family proteins (a family of structurally similar phospho-binding proteins that regulate major cellular functions) widely implicated in kidney tissue dysfunction. The kidney AL plaque-specific proteome consisted of 24 proteins, including those implicated in kidney damage (a1 antitrypsin and heat shock protein b1). Hierarchical clustering of AL cases based on their plaque-specific proteome identified four clusters, of which one was associated with improved kidney survival and was characterized by higher overall proteomic content and 143-3 proteins but lower levels of light chains and most signature proteins. Thus, our results suggest that there is significant heterogeneity across and within amyloid types, driven predominantly by complement proteins, and that toxicity.
更多
查看译文
关键词
amyloidosis,protein aggregation,proteomics
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要