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Oxidative Stress Induced Dysfunction of Protein Synthesis in 661W Mice Photoreceptor Cells

Version 2 2024-06-14, 15:41
Version 1 2023-07-17, 05:19
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 15:41 authored by L Deng, V Gupta, M Abyadeh, N Chitranshi, K Pushpitha, Y Wu, Veer GuptaVeer Gupta, Y You, JA Paulo, SL Graham, M Mirzaei, PA Haynes
Photoreceptor cells are highly susceptible to oxidative-stress-induced damage due to their high metabolic rate. Oxidative stress plays a key role in driving pathological events in several different ocular diseases, which lead to retinal degeneration and ultimately blindness. A growing number of studies have been performed to understand downstream events caused by ROS induced oxidative stress in photoreceptor cells; however, the underlying mechanisms of ROS toxicity are not fully understood. To shed light on ROS induced downstream pathological events, we employed a tandem mass tag (TMT) labelling-based quantitative mass-spectrometric approach to determine proteome changes in 661W photoreceptor cells following oxidative stress induction via the application of different concentrations of H2O2 at different time points. Overall, 5920 proteins were identified and quantified, and 450 differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) were identified, which were altered in a dose and time dependent manner in all treatment groups compared to the control group. These proteins were involved in several biological pathways, including spliceosome and ribosome response, activated glutathione metabolism, decreased ECM-receptor interaction, oxidative phosphorylation, abnormally regulated lysosome, apoptosis, and ribosome biogenesis. Our results highlighted ECM receptor interaction, oxidative phosphorylation and spliceosome pathways as the major targets of oxidative stress that might mediate vascular dysfunction and cellular senescence.

History

Journal

Proteomes

Volume

11

Article number

12

Pagination

1-16

Location

Basel, Switzerland

ISSN

2227-7382

eISSN

2227-7382

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

MDPI

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