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AuthorLouati, Kaouthar
AuthorMaalej, Amina
AuthorKolsi, Fatma
AuthorKallel, Rim
AuthorGdoura, Yassine
AuthorBorni, Mahdi
AuthorHakim, Leila Sellami
AuthorZribi, Rania
AuthorChoura, Sirine
AuthorSayadi, Sami
AuthorChamkha, Mohamed
AuthorMnif, Basma
AuthorKhemakhem, Zouheir
AuthorBoudawara, Tahya Sellami
AuthorBoudawara, Mohamed Zaher
AuthorSafta, Fathi
Available date2025-01-23T09:32:15Z
Publication Date2023-12-01
Publication NameJournal of Proteome Research
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.3c00484
CitationLouati, K., Maalej, A., Kolsi, F., Kallel, R., Gdoura, Y., Borni, M., ... & Safta, F. (2023). Shotgun Proteomic-Based Approach with a Q-Exactive Hybrid Quadrupole-Orbitrap High-Resolution Mass Spectrometer for Protein Adductomics on a 3D Human Brain Tumor Neurospheroid Culture Model: The Identification of Adduct Formation in Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase-2 and Annexin-A1 Induced by Pesticide Mixture. Journal of Proteome Research, 22(12), 3811-3832.‏
ISSN15353893
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85178322157&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/62417
AbstractPesticides are increasingly used in combinations in crop protection, resulting in enhanced toxicities for various organisms. Although protein adductomics is challenging, it remains a powerful bioanalytical tool to check environmental exposure and characterize xenobiotic adducts as putative toxicity biomarkers with high accuracy, facilitated by recent advances in proteomic methodologies and a mass spectrometry high-throughput technique. The present study aims to predict the potential neurotoxicity effect of imidacloprid and λ-cyhalothrin insecticides on human neural cells. Our protocol consisted first of 3D in vitro developing neurospheroids derived from human brain tumors and then treatment by pesticide mixture. Furthermore, we adopted a bottom-up proteomic-based approach using nanoflow ultraperformance liquid chromatography coupled with a high-resolution mass spectrometer for protein-adduct analysis with prediction of altered sites. Two proteins were selected, namely, calcium-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase-II (CaMK2) and annexin-A1 (ANXA1), as key targets endowed with primordial roles. De novo sequencing revealed several adduct formations in the active site of 82-ANXA1 and 228-CaMK2 as a result of neurotoxicity, predicted by the added mass shifts for the structure of electrophilic precursors. To the best of our knowledge, our study is the first to adopt a proteomic-based approach to investigate in depth pesticide molecular interactions and their potential to adduct proteins which play a crucial role in the neurotoxicity mechanism.
Languageen
PublisherAmerican Chemical Society
Subjectbrain tumors
neurospheroids
neurotoxicity
peptide sequencing
protein adductomics
tandem mass spectrometry
toxicity biomarkers
untargeted-proteomic-based approach
TitleShotgun Proteomic-Based Approach with a Q-Exactive Hybrid Quadrupole-Orbitrap High-Resolution Mass Spectrometer for Protein Adductomics on a 3D Human Brain Tumor Neurospheroid Culture Model: The Identification of Adduct Formation in Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase-2 and Annexin-A1 Induced by Pesticide Mixture
TypeArticle
Pagination3811-3832
Issue Number12
Volume Number22
dc.accessType Open Access


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