Plasma Protein Turnover Rates in Rats Using Stable Isotope Labeling, Global Proteomics, and Activity-Based Protein Profiling

2017 
Protein turnover is important for general health on cellular and organism scales providing a strategy to replace old, damaged, or dysfunctional proteins. Protein turnover also informs of biomarker kinetics, as a better understanding of synthesis and degradation of proteins increases the clinical utility of biomarkers. Here, turnover rates of plasma proteins in rats were measured in vivo using a pulse–chase stable isotope labeling experiment. During the pulse, rats (n = 5) were fed 13C6-labeled lysine (“heavy”) feed for 23 days to label proteins. During the chase, feed was changed to an unlabeled equivalent feed (“light”), and blood was repeatedly sampled from rats over 10 time points for 28 days. Plasma samples were digested with trypsin and analyzed with liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). MaxQuant was used to identify peptides and proteins and quantify heavy/light lysine ratios. A system of ordinary differential equations was used to calculate protein turnover rates. Using this ap...
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