4.4 Article

In vivo identification of potential uranium protein targets in zebrafish ovaries after chronic waterborne exposure

Journal

METALLOMICS
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages 525-534

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6mt00291a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NEEDS-Environment program
  2. IRSN
  3. FEDER funds via the CPER A2E [31486/08011464]

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Ecotoxicological studies have indicated the reprotoxicity of uranium (U) in zebrafish, but its molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Due to the non-covalent nature of U-protein complexes, canonical proteomics approaches are often not relevant as they usually use denaturating reagents or solvents. In this study, non-denaturating (ND) methods were used to obtain insight into the nature of U potential targets in ovaries of reproduced and non-reproduced zebrafish after 20 days of exposure to an environmentally relevant U concentration (20 mu g L-1). After the ND sample preparation, 1-dimensional (SEC) and 2-dimensional (OGE x SEC) separations followed by ICP-sector-field MS measurements (U, P, Fe, Cu, and Zn) enabled the determination of chemical characteristics (MW, pI) of the metal-protein complexes. Phosphorus and U coelution confirmed the affinity of U for P-containing proteins. In addition, 2D separation allowed the discrimination of Fe-metalloproteins as potential U targets. Finally, 20 protein candidates for U complexation were identified after tryptic digestion conditions by LC-ESI FT MS and a database search. Potential U targets were mainly involved in three biological processes: oxidative stress regulation (SOD, GST), cytoskeleton structure (actin) and embryo early development (vtg, initiation factor).

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