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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Structural and metabolic alterations in erythrocytes play an important role in the
pathophysiology of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Whether these
dysfunctions are related to the modulation of erythrocyte membrane proteins in
patients diagnosed with COPD remains to be determined. Herein, a comparative proteomic
profiling of the erythrocyte membrane fraction isolated from peripheral blood of smokers
diagnosed with COPD and smokers with no COPD was performed using differential 16O/18O
stable isotope labeling. A total of 219 proteins were quantified as being significantly
differentially expressed within the erythrocyte membrane proteomes of smokers with COPD
and healthy smokers. Functional pathway analysis showed that the most enriched
biofunctions were related to cell-to-cell signaling and interaction, hematological system
development, immune response, oxidative stress and cytoskeleton. Chorein (VPS13A), a
cytoskeleton related protein whose defects had been associated with the presence of cell
membrane deformation of circulating erythrocytes was found to be down-regulated in the
membrane fraction of erythrocytes obtained from COPD patients. Methemoglobin reductase
(CYB5R3) was also found to be underexpressed in these cells, suggesting that COPD patients
may be at higher risk for developing methemoglobinemia. This article is part of a Special Issue
entitled: “Integrated omics— Functional applications to blood and blood therapeutics”.
Description
Keywords
Proteomics DPOC Red Blood Cells Genómica Funcional
Pedagogical Context
Citation
J Proteomics. 2012 Apr 17. [Epub ahead of print]
