4.7 Article

High-Fat Diet Induced Isoform Changes of the Parkinson's Disease Protein DJ-1

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 2339-2351

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr401157k

Keywords

DJ-1; high-fat diet; obesity; protein isoforms; oxidative thiol modification

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research [NGFNplus 01GS0822, 01GS08195]
  2. research commission of the Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf
  3. FP7 EU grant NADINE [246513]
  4. German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BioPharma-NeuroAllianz Grant) [161A120B/031A120B]
  5. state government of North Rhine-Westphalia
  6. BIOMARKAPD project in the JPND program

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Genetic and environmental factors mediate via different physiological and molecular processes a shifted energy balance leading to overweight and obesity. To get insights into the underlying processes involved in energy intake and weight gain, we compared hypothalamic tissue of mice kept on a high-fat or control diet for 10 days by a proteomic approach. Using two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis in combination with LC-MS/MS, we observed significant abundance changes in 15 protein spots. One isoform of the protein DJ-1 was elevated in the high-fat diet group in three different mouse strains SWR/J, CS7BL/6N, and AKR/J analyzed. Large-scale validation of DJ-1 isoforms in individual samples and tissues confirmed a shift in the pattern of DJ-1 isoforms toward more acidic isoforms in several brain and peripheral tissues after feeding a high-fat diet for 10 days. The identification of oxidation of cysteine 106 as well as 2-succinyl modification of the same residue by mass spectrometry not only explains the isoelectric shift of DJ-1 but also links our results to similar shifts of DJ-1 observed in neurodegenerative disease states under oxidative stress. We hypothesize that DJ-1 is a common physiological sensor involved in both nutrition-induced effects and neurodegenerative disease states.

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