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result(s) for
"Hunyadi-Gulyas, Eva"
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Status Report on the High-Throughput Characterization of Complex Intact O-Glycopeptide Mixtures
by
Medzihradszky, Katalin F.
,
Hunyadi-Gulyas, Eva
,
Darula, Zsuzsanna
in
Activation
,
Analytical Chemistry
,
Antibiotics
2018
A very complex mixture of intact, human N- and O-glycopeptides, enriched from the tryptic digest of urinary proteins of three healthy donors using a two-step lectin affinity enrichment, was analyzed by LC-MS/MS, leading to approximately 45,000 glycopeptide EThcD spectra. Two search engines, Byonic and Protein Prospector, were used for the interpretation of the data, and N- and O-linked glycopeptides were assigned from separate searches. The identification rate was very low in all searches, even when results were combined. Thus, we investigated the reasons why was it so, to help to improve the identification success rate. Focusing on O-linked glycopeptides, we noticed that in EThcD, larger glycan oxonium ions better survive the activation than those in HCD. These fragments, combined with reducing terminal Y ions, provide important information about the glycan(s) present, so we investigated whether filtering the peaklists for glycan oxonium ions indicating the presence of a tetra- or hexasaccharide structure would help to reveal all molecules containing such glycans. Our study showed that intact glycans frequently do not survive even mild supplemental activation, meaning one cannot rely on these oxonium ions exclusively. We found that ETD efficiency is still a limiting factor, and for highly glycosylated peptides, the only information revealed in EThcD was related to the glycan structures. The limited overlap of results delivered by the two search engines draws attention to the fact that automated data interpretation of O-linked glycopeptides is not even close to being solved.
Graphical abstract
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Journal Article
Small extracellular vesicles convey the stress-induced adaptive responses of melanoma cells
2019
Exosomes are small extracellular vesicles (sEVs), playing a crucial role in the intercellular communication in physiological as well as pathological processes. Here, we aimed to study whether the melanoma-derived sEV-mediated communication could adapt to microenvironmental stresses. We compared B16F1 cell-derived sEVs released under normal and stress conditions, including cytostatic, heat and oxidative stress. The miRNome and proteome showed substantial differences across the sEV groups and bioinformatics analysis of the obtained data by the Ingenuity Pathway Analysis also revealed significant functional differences. The
in silico
predicted functional alterations of sEVs were validated by
in vitro
assays. For instance, melanoma-derived sEVs elicited by oxidative stress increased Ki-67 expression of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); cytostatic stress-resulted sEVs facilitated melanoma cell migration; all sEV groups supported microtissue generation of MSC-B16F1 co-cultures in a 3D tumour matrix model. Based on this study, we concluded that (i) molecular patterns of tumour-derived sEVs, dictated by the microenvironmental conditions, resulted in specific response patterns in the recipient cells; (ii)
in silico
analyses could be useful tools to predict different stress responses; (iii) alteration of the sEV-mediated communication of tumour cells might be a therapy-induced host response, with a potential influence on treatment efficacy.
Journal Article
Characterization of Large Extracellular Vesicles Released by Apoptotic and Pyroptotic Cells
by
Tamura, Ririka
,
Menna, Luigi
,
Fekete, Nora
in
Apoptosis
,
Apoptosis - drug effects
,
Biomarkers
2026
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are emerging as key factors in maintaining cellular homeostasis, critical mediators of intercellular communication, potential biomarkers, and therapeutic tools. While small EVs have been extensively characterized, the molecular signatures of large EVs (including those generated during regulated cell death pathways) remain poorly defined. Here, we investigated the characteristics of large EVs released during apoptosis and pyroptosis by human monocytic cell lines (THP-1 and U937). Apoptosis was induced by staurosporine and blocked using the pan-caspase inhibitor Q-VD-OPh, whereas pyroptosis was triggered by LPS/nigericin and inhibited with a selective NLRP3 inhibitor. We found that both forms of regulated cell death markedly enhanced the release of large EVs. Both apoptotic and pyroptotic large EVs showed increased Annexin V binding and decreased CD9 expression compared with those released by healthy cells. Large EVs derived from apoptotic and pyroptotic cells exhibited distinct proteomic profiles. Pyroptotic large EVs carried interacting protein networks of RNA-binding proteins and chromatin-associated proteins many of which are known damage-associated molecular patterns or alarmins. In contrast, we found that a subpopulation of apoptotic large EVs was characterized by the presence of dsDNA, and active caspase-3/7. Together, our data shed light on the specific protein cargo of large EVs released by cells during apoptosis and pyroptosis. This study identifies candidate markers of large EVs released by dying cells and may enhance our understanding of the role of EVs in regulated cell death.
Journal Article
Effects of Hyperoxia and Hyperoxic Oscillations on the Proteome of Murine Lung Microvascular Endothelium
by
Hunyadi-Gulyas, Eva
,
Schmid, Johannes A.
,
Tiboldi, Akos
in
Acids
,
acute respiratory distress syndrome
,
Animal models
2022
Patients presenting with insufficient tissue oxygenation and impaired lung function as in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) frequently require mechanical ventilation with supplemental oxygen. Despite the lung being used to experiencing the highest partial pressure of oxygen during healthy breathing, the organ is susceptible to oxygen-induced injury at supraphysiological concentrations. Hyperoxia-induced lung injury (HALI) has been regarded as a second hit to pre-existing lung injury and ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) attributed to oxidative stress. The injured lung has a tendency to form atelectasis, a cyclic collapse and reopening of alveoli. The affected lung areas experience oxygen conditions that oscillate between hyperoxia and hypoxia rather than remaining in a constant hyperoxic state. Mechanisms of HALI have been investigated in many animal models previously. These studies provided insights into the effects of hyperoxia on the whole organism. However, cell type-specific responses have not been dissected in detail, but are necessary for a complete mechanistic understanding of ongoing pathological processes. In our study, we investigated the effects of constant and intermittent hyperoxia on the lung endothelium from a mouse by an in vitro proteomic approach. We demonstrate that these oxygen conditions have characteristic effects on the pulmonary endothelial proteome that underlie the physiological (patho)mechanisms.
Journal Article
The Guanine-Quadruplex Structure in the Human c-myc Gene's Promoter Is Converted into B-DNA Form by the Human Poly(ADP-Ribose)Polymerase-1
by
Kenesi, Erzsebet
,
Dunai, Zsuzsanna A.
,
Berko, Barbara
in
Adenosine diphosphate
,
Animals
,
Apoptosis
2012
The important regulatory role of the guanine-quadruplex (GQ) structure, present in the nuclease hypersensitive element (NHE) III(1) region of the human c-myc (h c-myc) gene's promoter, in the regulation of the transcription of that gene has been documented. Here we present evidences, that the human nuclear poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase-1 (h PARP-1) protein participates in the regulation of the h c-myc gene expression through its interaction with this GQ structure, characterized by binding assays, fluorescence energy transfer (FRET) experiments and by affinity pull-down experiments in vitro, and by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-qPCR analysis and h c-myc-promoter-luciferase reporter determinations in vivo. We surmise that h PARP-1 binds to the GQ structure and participates in the conversion of that structure into the transcriptionally more active B-DNA form. The first Zn-finger structure present in h PARP-1 participates in this interaction. PARP-1 might be a new member of the group of proteins participating in the regulation of transcription through their interactions with GQ structures present in the promoters of different genes.
Journal Article
Oxygen-Dependent Changes in the N-Glycome of Murine Pulmonary Endothelial Cells
by
Zach, Marie Louise
,
Spittler, Andreas
,
Ullrich, Roman
in
Acids
,
adverse effects
,
biosynthesis
2021
Supplemental oxygen is frequently used together with mechanical ventilation to achieve sufficient blood oxygenation. Despite the undoubted benefits, it is vigorously debated whether too much oxygen can also have unpredicted side-effects. Uncertainty is also due to the fact that the molecular mechanisms are still insufficiently understood. The lung endothelium is covered with an exceptionally broad glycocalyx, carrying N- and O-glycans, proteoglycans, glycolipids and glycosaminoglycans. Glycan structures are not genetically determined but depend on the metabolic state and the expression level and activity of biosynthetic and glycan remodeling enzymes, which can be influenced by oxygen and the redox status of the cell. Altered glycan structures can affect cell interactions and signaling. In this study, we investigated the effect of different oxygen conditions on aspects of the glycobiology of the pulmonary endothelium with an emphasis on N-glycans and terminal sialylation using an in vitro cell culture system. We combined a proteomic approach with N-glycan structure analysis by LC-MS, qRT-PCR, sialic acid analysis and lectin binding to show that constant and intermittent hyperoxia induced time dependent changes in global and surface glycosylation. An siRNA approach identified St6gal1 as being primarily responsible for the early transient increase of α2-6 sialylated structures in response to hyperoxia.
Journal Article
Hydrolytic Mechanism of a Metalloenzyme Is Modified by the Nature of the Coordinated Metal Ion
by
Hunyadi-Gulyás, Éva
,
Nafaee, Zeyad H.
,
Hajdu, Bálint
in
Beta lactamases
,
Binding sites
,
Chromatography
2023
The nuclease domain of colicin E7 cleaves double-strand DNA non-specifically. Zn2+ ion was shown to be coordinated by the purified NColE7 as its native metal ion. Here, we study the structural and catalytic aspects of the interaction with Ni2+, Cu2+ and Cd2+ non-endogenous metal ions and the consequences of their competition with Zn2+ ions, using circular dichroism spectroscopy and intact protein mass spectrometry. An R447G mutant exerting decreased activity allowed for the detection of nuclease action against pUC119 plasmid DNA via agarose gel electrophoresis in the presence of comparable metal ion concentrations. It was shown that all of the added metal ions could bind to the apoprotein, resulting in a minor secondary structure change, but drastically shifting the charge distribution of the protein. Zn2+ ions could not be replaced by Ni2+, Cu2+ and Cd2+. The nuclease activity of the Ni2+-bound enzyme was extremely high in comparison with the other metal-bound forms, and could not be inhibited by the excess of Ni2+ ions. At the same time, this activity was significantly decreased in the presence of equivalent Zn2+, independent of the order of addition of each component of the mixture. We concluded that the Ni2+ ions promoted the DNA cleavage of the enzyme through a more efficient mechanism than the native Zn2+ ions, as they directly generate the nucleophilic OH− ion.
Journal Article
Identification of Neuronal Pentraxins as Synaptic Binding Partners of C1q and the Involvement of NP1 in Synaptic Pruning in Adult Mice
by
Fedor, Flóra Zsófia
,
Kardos, József
,
Mátyás, Dominik
in
Alzheimer's disease
,
Antibodies
,
Cell culture
2021
Elements of the immune system particularly that of innate immunity, play important roles beyond their traditional tasks in host defense, including manifold roles in the nervous system. Complement-mediated synaptic pruning is essential in the developing and healthy functioning brain and becomes aberrant in neurodegenerative disorders. C1q, component of the classical complement pathway, plays a central role in tagging synapses for elimination; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms and interaction partners are mostly unknown. Neuronal pentraxins (NPs) are involved in synapse formation and plasticity, moreover, NP1 contributes to cell death and neurodegeneration under adverse conditions. Here, we investigated the potential interaction between C1q and NPs, and its role in microglial phagocytosis of synapses in adult mice. We verified in vitro that NPs interact with C1q, as well as activate the complement system. Flow cytometry, immunostaining and co-immunoprecipitation showed that synapse-bound C1q colocalizes and interacts with NPs. High-resolution confocal microscopy revealed that microglia-surrounded C1q-tagged synapses are NP1 positive. We have also observed the synaptic occurrence of C4 suggesting that activation of the classical pathway cannot be ruled out in synaptic plasticity in healthy adult animals. In summary, our results indicate that NPs play a regulatory role in the synaptic function of C1q. Whether this role can be intensified upon pathological conditions, such as in Alzheimer’s disease, is to be disclosed.
Journal Article
Altered Functional Protein Networks in the Prefrontal Cortex and Amygdala of Victims of Suicide
2012
Probing molecular brain mechanisms related to increased suicide risk is an important issue in biological psychiatry research. Gene expression studies on post mortem brains indicate extensive changes prior to a successful suicide attempt; however, proteomic studies are scarce. Thus, we performed a DIGE proteomic analysis of post mortem tissue samples from the prefrontal cortex and amygdala of suicide victims to identify protein changes and biomarker candidates of suicide. Among our matched spots we found 46 and 16 significant differences in the prefrontal cortex and amygdala, respectively; by using the industry standard t test and 1.3 fold change as cut off for significance. Because of the risk of false discoveries (FDR) in these data, we also made FDR adjustment by calculating the q-values for all the t tests performed and by using 0.06 and 0.4 as alpha thresholds we reduced the number of significant spots to 27 and 9 respectively. From these we identified 59 proteins in the cortex and 11 proteins in the amygdala. These proteins are related to biological functions and structures such as metabolism, the redox system, the cytoskeleton, synaptic function, and proteolysis. Thirteen of these proteins (CBR1, DPYSL2, EFHD2, FKBP4, GFAP, GLUL, HSPA8, NEFL, NEFM, PGAM1, PRDX6, SELENBP1 and VIM,) have already been suggested to be biomarkers of psychiatric disorders at protein or genome level. We also pointed out 9 proteins that changed in both the amygdala and the cortex, and from these, GFAP, INA, NEFL, NEFM and TUBA1 are interacting cytoskeletal proteins that have a functional connection to glutamate, GABA, and serotonin receptors. Moreover, ACTB, CTSD and GFAP displayed opposite changes in the two examined brain structures that might be a suitable characteristic for brain imaging studies. The opposite changes of ACTB, CTSD and GFAP in the two brain structures were validated by western blot analysis.
Journal Article
Melanoma-Derived Exosomes Induce PD-1 Overexpression and Tumor Progression via Mesenchymal Stem Cell Oncogenic Reprogramming
2019
Recently, it has been described that programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) overexpressing melanoma cells are highly aggressive. However, until now it has not been defined which factors lead to the generation of PD-1 overexpressing subpopulations. Here, we present that melanoma-derived exosomes, conveying oncogenic molecular reprogramming, induce the formation of a melanoma-like, PD-1 overexpressing cell population (mMSC
) from naïve mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Exosomes and mMSC
cells induce tumor progression and expression of oncogenic factors
. Finally, we revealed a characteristic, tumorigenic signaling network combining the upregulated molecules (e.g., PD-1, MET, RAF1, BCL2, MTOR) and their upstream exosomal regulating proteins and miRNAs. Our study highlights the complexity of exosomal communication during tumor progression and contributes to the detailed understanding of metastatic processes.
Journal Article