4.7 Article

SWATH Based Quantitative Proteomics Reveals Significant Lipid Metabolism in Early Myopic Guinea Pig Retina

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22094721

Keywords

SWATH-MS; proteomics; myopia; retina; guinea pigs; lipid metabolism

Funding

  1. PolyU PhD Studentship [RTX2]
  2. RGC General Research Fund [15104819, 15102015/15M]
  3. Henry G. Leong Endowed Professorship in Elderly Vision Health
  4. Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Commission [JCYJ20180507183409601]
  5. Australian Government Endeavour Cheung Kong Research Fellowship [G0189472]
  6. Australian DIIRSE International Science Linkage [CG120160]
  7. [ZVN2]

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Most of the previous myopic animal studies used lower resolution proteomics approaches and single-candidate methods, making it difficult to detect minor changes. This study utilized SWATH proteomic analysis to identify significant protein changes in pigmented guinea pigs after induced myopia, highlighting lipid metabolism as a top function associated with differentially expressed proteins. The study provides new insights for further research in myopia control.
Most of the previous myopic animal studies employed a single-candidate approach and lower resolution proteomics approaches that were difficult to detect minor changes, and generated limited systems-wide biological information. Hence, a complete picture of molecular events in the retina involving myopic development is lacking. Here, to investigate comprehensive retinal protein alternations and underlying molecular events in the early myopic stage, we performed a data-independent Sequential Window Acquisition of all Theoretical Mass Spectra (SWATH) based proteomic analysis coupled with different bioinformatics tools in pigmented guinea pigs after 4-day lens-induced myopia (LIM). Myopic eyes compared to untreated contralateral control eyes caused significant changes in refractive error and choroid thickness (p < 0.05, n = 5). Relative elongation of axial length and the vitreous chamber depth were also observed. Using pooled samples from all individuals (n = 10) to build a species-specific retinal ion library for SWATH analysis, 3202 non-redundant proteins (with 24,616 peptides) were identified at 1% global FDR. For quantitative analysis, the 10 individual retinal samples (5 pairs) were analyzed using a high resolution Triple-TOF 6600 mass spectrometry (MS) with technical replicates. In total, 37 up-regulated and 21 down-regulated proteins were found significantly changed after LIM treatment (log2 ratio (T/C) > 0.26 or < -0.26; p <= 0.05). Data are accepted via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD025003. Through Ingenuity Pathways Analysis (IPA), lipid metabolism was found as the top function associated with the differentially expressed proteins. Based on the protein abundance and peptide sequences, expression patterns of two regulated proteins (SLC6A6 and PTGES2) identified in this pathway were further successfully validated with high confidence (p < 0.05) using a novel Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM) assay on a QTRAP 6500+ MS. In summary, through an integrated discovery and targeted proteomic approach, this study serves as the first report to detect and confirm novel retinal protein changes and significant biological functions in the early LIM mammalian guinea pigs. The study provides new workflow and insights for further research to myopia control.

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