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Molecular architecture of mouse and human pancreatic zymogen granules: protein components and their copy numbers.

Citation
Lee, J. -S., et al. “Molecular Architecture Of Mouse And Human Pancreatic Zymogen Granules: Protein Components And Their Copy Numbers.”. Biophysics Reports, pp. 94-103.
Center University of Michigan
Author Jin-Sook Lee, Joseph A Caruso, Garrett Hubbs, Patricia Schnepp, James Woods, Jingye Fang, Chunying Li, Kezhong Zhang, Paul M Stemmer, Bhanu P Jena, Xuequn Chen
Keywords Absolute quantification, Copy numbers, GeLC–MS/MS, LC-SRM, Pancreatic zymogen granule
Abstract

A molecular model of pancreatic zymogen granule (ZG) is critical for understanding its functions. We have extensively characterized the composition and membrane topology of rat ZG proteins. In this study, we report the development of targeted proteomics approaches to quantify representative mouse and human ZG proteins using LC-SRM and heavy isotope-labeled synthetic peptides. The absolute quantities of mouse Rab3D and VAMP8 were determined as 1242 ± 218 and 2039 ± 151 (mean ± SEM) copies per ZG. The size distribution and the averaged diameter of ZGs 750 ± 23 nm (mean ± SEM) were determined by atomic force microscopy. The absolute quantification of Rab3D was then validated using semi-quantitative Western blotting with purified GST-Rab3D proteins as an internal standard. To extend our proteomics analysis to human pancreas, ZGs were purified using human acini obtained from pancreatic islet transplantation center. One hundred and eighty human ZG proteins were identified for the first time including both the membrane and the content proteins. Furthermore, the copy number per ZG of human Rab3D and VAMP8 were determined to be 1182 ± 45 and 485 ± 15 (mean ± SEM). The comprehensive proteomic analyses of mouse and human pancreatic ZGs have the potential to identify species-specific ZG proteins. The determination of protein copy numbers on pancreatic ZGs represents a significant advance towards building a quantitative molecular model of a prototypical secretory vesicle using targeted proteomics approaches. The identification of human ZG proteins lays a foundation for subsequent studies of altered ZG compositions and secretion in pancreatic diseases.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Biophysics reports
Volume
4
Issue
2
Number of Pages
94-103
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2364-3439
DOI
10.1007/s41048-018-0055-1
Alternate Journal
Biophys Rep
PMID
29756009
PMCID
PMC5937866
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