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1.
Metabolomics ; 20(2): 37, 2024 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38459207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Lipids play key roles in numerous biological processes, including energy storage, cell membrane structure, signaling, immune responses, and homeostasis, making lipidomics a vital branch of metabolomics that analyzes and characterizes a wide range of lipid classes. Addressing the complex etiology, age-related risk, progression, inflammation, and research overlap in conditions like Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Cardiovascular Diseases, and Cancer poses significant challenges in the quest for effective therapeutic targets, improved diagnostic markers, and advanced treatments. Mass spectrometry is an indispensable tool in clinical lipidomics, delivering quantitative and structural lipid data, and its integration with technologies like Liquid Chromatography (LC), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), and few emerging Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization- Imaging Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-IMS) along with its incorporation into Tissue Microarray (TMA) represents current advances. These innovations enhance lipidomics assessment, bolster accuracy, and offer insights into lipid subcellular localization, dynamics, and functional roles in disease contexts. AIM OF THE REVIEW: The review article summarizes recent advancements in lipidomic methodologies from 2019 to 2023 for diagnosing major neurodegenerative diseases, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, serious non-communicable cardiovascular diseases and cancer, emphasizing the role of lipid level variations, and highlighting the potential of lipidomics data integration with genomics and proteomics to improve disease understanding and innovative prognostic, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. KEY SCIENTIFIC CONCEPTS OF REVIEW: Clinical lipidomic studies are a promising approach to track and analyze lipid profiles, revealing their crucial roles in various diseases. This lipid-focused research provides insights into disease mechanisms, biomarker identification, and potential therapeutic targets, advancing our understanding and management of conditions such as Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Cardiovascular Diseases, and specific cancers.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Cardiovascular Diseases , Neoplasms , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Parkinson Disease , Humans , Lipids/analysis , Metabolomics/methods , Alzheimer Disease/diagnosis , Neurodegenerative Diseases/diagnosis , Cardiovascular Diseases/diagnosis , Parkinson Disease/diagnosis , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization , Neoplasms/diagnosis
2.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(4)2022 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35216108

ABSTRACT

With the advent of human civilization and anthropogenic activities in the shade of urbanization and global climate change, plants are exposed to a complex set of abiotic stresses. These stresses affect plants' growth, development, and yield and cause enormous crop losses worldwide. In this alarming scenario of global climate conditions, plants respond to such stresses through a highly balanced and finely tuned interaction between signaling molecules. The abiotic stresses initiate the quick release of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as toxic by-products of altered aerobic metabolism during different stress conditions at the cellular level. ROS includes both free oxygen radicals {superoxide (O2•-) and hydroxyl (OH-)} as well as non-radicals [hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and singlet oxygen (1O2)]. ROS can be generated and scavenged in different cell organelles and cytoplasm depending on the type of stimulus. At high concentrations, ROS cause lipid peroxidation, DNA damage, protein oxidation, and necrosis, but at low to moderate concentrations, they play a crucial role as secondary messengers in intracellular signaling cascades. Because of their concentration-dependent dual role, a huge number of molecules tightly control the level of ROS in cells. The plants have evolved antioxidants and scavenging machinery equipped with different enzymes to maintain the equilibrium between the production and detoxification of ROS generated during stress. In this present article, we have focused on current insights on generation and scavenging of ROS during abiotic stresses. Moreover, the article will act as a knowledge base for new and pivotal studies on ROS generation and scavenging.


Subject(s)
Plants/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Animals , Climate Change , DNA Damage/physiology , Humans , Lipid Peroxidation/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology
3.
Plant Cell Physiol ; 56(1): 61-72, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25305245

ABSTRACT

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) bodies are ER-derived structures that are found in Brassicaceae species and thought to play a role in defense. Here, we have investigated the occurrence, distribution and function of ER bodies in root cells of Raphanus sativus using a combination of microscopic and biochemical methods. We have also assessed the response of ER bodies to methyl jasmonate (MeJA), a phytohormone that mediates plant defense against wounding and pathogens. Our results show that (i) ER bodies do occur in different root cell types from the root cap region to the differentiation zone; (ii) they do accumulate a PYK10-like protein similar to the major marker protein of ER bodies that is involved in defense in Arabidopsis thaliana; and (iii) treatment of root cells with MeJA causes a significant increase in the number of ER bodies and the activity of ß-glucosidases. More importantly, MeJA was found to induce the formation of very long ER bodies that results from the fusion of small ones, a phenomenon that has not been reported in any other study so far. These findings demonstrate that MeJA impacts the number and morphology of functional ER bodies and stimulates ER body enzyme activities, probably to participate in defense responses of radish root. They also suggest that these structures may provide a defensive system specific to root cells.


Subject(s)
Acetates/pharmacology , Cyclopentanes/pharmacology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , Oxylipins/pharmacology , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Roots/drug effects , Raphanus/drug effects , Genes, Reporter , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Roots/cytology , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Raphanus/cytology , Raphanus/genetics , Raphanus/metabolism , Seedlings/cytology , Seedlings/drug effects , Seedlings/genetics , Seedlings/metabolism
4.
Plant Physiol ; 162(1): 364-78, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23482874

ABSTRACT

The plant metabolite oxalic acid is increasingly recognized as a food toxin with negative effects on human nutrition. Decarboxylative degradation of oxalic acid is catalyzed, in a substrate-specific reaction, by oxalate decarboxylase (OXDC), forming formic acid and carbon dioxide. Attempts to date to reduce oxalic acid levels and to understand the biological significance of OXDC in crop plants have met with little success. To investigate the role of OXDC and the metabolic consequences of oxalate down-regulation in a heterotrophic, oxalic acid-accumulating fruit, we generated transgenic tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) plants expressing an OXDC (FvOXDC) from the fungus Flammulina velutipes specifically in the fruit. These E8.2-OXDC fruit showed up to a 90% reduction in oxalate content, which correlated with concomitant increases in calcium, iron, and citrate. Expression of OXDC affected neither carbon dioxide assimilation rates nor resulted in any detectable morphological differences in the transgenic plants. Comparative proteomic analysis suggested that metabolic remodeling was associated with the decrease in oxalate content in transgenic fruit. Examination of the E8.2-OXDC fruit proteome revealed that OXDC-responsive proteins involved in metabolism and stress responses represented the most substantially up- and down-regulated categories, respectively, in the transgenic fruit, compared with those of wild-type plants. Collectively, our study provides insights into OXDC-regulated metabolic networks and may provide a widely applicable strategy for enhancing crop nutritional value.


Subject(s)
Carboxy-Lyases/genetics , Flammulina/genetics , Plant Proteins/isolation & purification , Signal Transduction , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/metabolism , Down-Regulation , Flammulina/enzymology , Fruit/genetics , Fruit/metabolism , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Solanum lycopersicum/growth & development , Organ Specificity , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Proteomics
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38910429

ABSTRACT

Unconventional Post-Translational Modifications (PTMs) have gained increasing attention as crucial players in cancer development and progression. Understanding the role of unconventional PTMs in cancer has the potential to revolutionize cancer diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic interventions. These modifications, which include O-GlcNAcylation, glutathionylation, crotonylation, including hundreds of others, have been implicated in the dysregulation of critical cellular processes and signaling pathways in cancer cells. This review paper aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of unconventional PTMs in cancer as diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets. The paper includes reviewing the current knowledge on the functional significance of various conventional and unconventional PTMs in cancer biology. Furthermore, the paper highlights the advancements in analytical techniques, such as biochemical analyses, mass spectrometry and bioinformatic tools etc., that have enabled the detection and characterization of unconventional PTMs in cancer. These techniques have contributed to the identification of specific PTMs associated with cancer subtypes. The potential use of Unconventional PTMs as biomarkers will further help in better diagnosis and aid in discovering potent therapeutics. The knowledge about the role of Unconventional PTMs in a vast and rapidly expanding field will help in detection and targeted therapy of cancer.

6.
J Proteomics ; 143: 242-253, 2016 06 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27153761

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Oxalic acid (OA) plays dual role in fungal pathogenicity in a concentration dependent manner. While at higher concentration it induces programmed cell death leading to fungal invasion, low oxalate build resistance in plant. Although OA has been identified as a virulence determinant for rot disease caused by Sclerotinia sp., our understanding of how oxalate downregulation impart host immunity is limited. We have earlier shown that ectopic expression of oxalate decarboxylase (FvOXDC) specifically degrades OA in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). To elucidate low oxalate regulated molecular mechanism imparting immunity, a comparative proteomics approach has been applied to E8.2-OXDC tomato fruit displaying fungal resistance. Mass spectrometric analyses identified 92 OXDC-responsive immunity related protein spots (ORIRPs) presumably associated with acid metabolism, defense signaling and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Metabolome study indicated increased abundance of some of the organic acids paralleling the proteomic analysis. Further, we interrogated the proteome data using network analysis that identified modules enriched in known and novel immunity-related prognostic proteins centered around 14-3-3, translationally controlled tumor protein, annexin and chaperonin. Taken together, our data demonstrate that low oxalate may act as metabolic and immunity determinant through translational reprogramming. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Although OA plays critical role as fungal elicitor, our understanding of how oxalate downregulation by decarboxylative degradation impart immunity is limited. Our study confirms the impact of oxalate down-regulation on overall cellular physiology and provides new perspectives to study plant immunity. The network representation may facilitate the prioritization of candidate proteins for patho-stress tolerance in crop plant. These findings are of great importance for future work towards functional determination and exploitation of target proteins in crop improvement program.


Subject(s)
Ascomycota/immunology , Carboxy-Lyases/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/immunology , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Ascomycota/drug effects , Carboxy-Lyases/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/pharmacology , Solanum lycopersicum/enzymology , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiology , Metabolomics , Oxalic Acid/metabolism , Plant Immunity/drug effects , Plant Proteins/immunology , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Proteome/analysis , Proteome/immunology , Proteomics , Transgenes
7.
Front Plant Sci ; 7: 1034, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27507973

ABSTRACT

Fruit is an assimilator of metabolites, nutrients, and signaling molecules, thus considered as potential target for pathogen attack. In response to patho-stress, such as fungal invasion, plants reorganize their proteome, and reconfigure their physiology in the infected organ. This remodeling is coordinated by a poorly understood signal transduction network, hormonal cascades, and metabolite reallocation. The aim of the study was to explore organ-based proteomic alterations in the susceptibility of heterotrophic fruit to necrotrophic fungal attack. We conducted time-series protein profiling of Sclerotinia rolfsii invaded tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) fruit. The differential display of proteome revealed 216 patho-stress responsive proteins (PSRPs) that change their abundance by more than 2.5-fold. Mass spectrometric analyses led to the identification of 56 PSRPs presumably involved in disease progression; regulating diverse functions viz. metabolism, signaling, redox homeostasis, transport, stress-response, protein folding, modification and degradation, development. Metabolome study indicated differential regulation of organic acid, amino acids, and carbohydrates paralleling with the proteomics analysis. Further, we interrogated the proteome data using network analysis that identified two significant functional protein hubs centered around malate dehydrogenase, T-complex protein 1 subunit gamma, and ATP synthase beta. This study reports, for the first-time, kinetically controlled patho-stress responsive protein network during post-harvest storage in a sink tissue, particularly fruit and constitute the basis toward understanding the onset and context of disease signaling and metabolic pathway alterations. The network representation may facilitate the prioritization of candidate proteins for quality improvement in storage organ.

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