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1.
Laserspray ionization (LSI) mass spectrometry (MS) allows, for the first time, the analysis of proteins directly from tissue using high performance atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometers. Several abundant and numerous lower abundant protein ions with molecular masses up to ∼20,000 Da were detected as highly charged ions from delipified mouse brain tissue mounted on a common microscope slide and coated with 2,5-dihydroxyacetophenone as matrix. The ability of LSI to produce multiply charged ions by laser ablation at atmospheric pressure allowed protein analysis at 100,000 mass resolution on an Orbitrap Exactive Fourier transform mass spectrometer. A single acquisition was sufficient to identify the myelin basic protein N-terminal fragment directly from tissue using electron transfer dissociation on a linear trap quadrupole (LTQ) Velos. The high mass resolution and mass accuracy, also obtained with a single acquisition, are useful in determining protein molecular weights and from the electron transfer dissociation data in confirming database-generated sequences. Furthermore, microscopy images of the ablated areas show matrix ablation of ∼15 μm-diameter spots in this study. The results suggest that LSI-MS at atmospheric pressure potentially combines speed of analysis and imaging capability common to matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization and soft ionization, multiple charging, improved fragmentation, and cross-section analysis common to electrospray ionization.Tissue imaging by mass spectrometry (MS) is proving useful in areas such as detecting tumor margins, determining sites of high drug uptake, and mapping signaling molecules in brain tissue (18). Imaging using secondary ion mass spectrometry is well established but is only marginally useful with intact molecular mass measurements from biological tissue (911). Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)-MS operating under vacuum conditions has been used for tissue imaging with success, especially for abundant components such as membrane lipids, drug metabolites, and proteins (1214). Spatial resolution of ∼20 μm has been achieved (15), and the MALDI-MS method has been applied in an attempt to shed light on Parkinson disease (16, 17), muscular dystrophy (18), obesity, and cancer (12, 19).Unfortunately, there are disadvantages in using vacuum-based MS for tissue imaging in relation to analysis of unadulterated tissue. Also, the mass spectrometers used in these studies frequently have much lower mass resolution and mass accuracy than are available with atmospheric pressure ionization (API)1 instruments and are not as widely available. Because the vacuum ionization methods produce singly charged ions, mass-selected fragmentation methods provide only limited information, especially for proteins. In addition, no advanced fragmentation such as electron transfer dissociation (ETD) (2022) is available for confident protein confirmation or identification. Atmospheric pressure (AP) MALDI can be coupled to high performance mass spectrometers but suffers from sensitivity issues for tissue imaging where high spatial resolution is desired (23). AP MALDI also primarily produces singly charged ions (24, 25). Thus, mass and cross-section analysis of intact proteins has yet to be accomplished using AP MALDI because of intrinsic mass range limitations of API instruments, which frequently have a mass-to-charge (m/z) limit of <4000. Thus, new improved methods of mass-specific tissue imaging, especially at AP, are needed.The potential of laserspray ionization (LSI) (Scheme 1) (2633) for protein tissue analysis is reported here. LSI has advantages relative to other MS-based methods, including speed of analysis, laser ablation of small volumes, more relevant AP conditions, extended mass range and improved fragmentation through multiple charging, and the ability to obtain cross-section data for proteins on appropriate instrumentation. The applicability of LSI for high mass compounds on high performance API mass spectrometers (Orbitrap Exactive and SYNAPT G2) has been demonstrated producing ESI-like multiply protonated ions (2628). The first experiments showing sequence analysis by ETD using the LSI method were successfully carried out on a Thermo Fisher Scientific (San Jose, CA) LTQ-ETD mass spectrometer (26). Nearly complete sequence coverage was obtained for ubiquitin, an important regulatory protein. Applying ETD fragmentation to LSI-MS analyses potentially provides a new method for studying biological processes, including the mapping of phosphorylation, glycosylation, and ubiquitination sites from intact proteins and directly from tissue.Open in a separate windowScheme 1.Overview of LSI-MS operated in transmission geometry.Furthermore, unlike ESI and related ESI-based methods such as desorption-ESI (34), the LSI method has been shown to allow analysis of lipids in tissue from ablated areas <80 μm (30). In comparison with literature reports for AP MALDI at the same stage of development (35), LSI is more than an order of magnitude more sensitive and is capable of analyzing proteins on high resolution mass spectrometers as was demonstrated by obtaining full-acquisition mass spectra at 100,000 mass resolution (FWHH, m/z 200) after application of only 20 fmol of bovine pancreas insulin in the matrix 2,5-dihydroxyacetophenone (2,5-DHAP) onto a glass microscope slide (33). The analysis speed of LSI was demonstrated by obtaining mass spectra of five samples in 8 s (32). Here, we show the utility of LSI for intact peptide and protein analyses directly from mouse brain tissue. The ability to obtain a protein mass spectrum directly from mouse brain tissue in a single laser shot at 100,000 mass resolution and with ETD fragmentation is demonstrated.  相似文献   

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The field of proteomics has evolved hand-in-hand with technological advances in LC-MS/MS systems, now enabling the analysis of very deep proteomes in a reasonable time. However, most applications do not deal with full cell or tissue proteomes but rather with restricted subproteomes relevant for the research context at hand or resulting from extensive fractionation. At the same time, investigation of many conditions or perturbations puts a strain on measurement capacity. Here, we develop a high-throughput workflow capable of dealing with large numbers of low or medium complexity samples and specifically aim at the analysis of 96-well plates in a single day (15 min per sample). We combine parallel sample processing with a modified liquid chromatography platform driving two analytical columns in tandem, which are coupled to a quadrupole Orbitrap mass spectrometer (Q Exactive HF). The modified LC platform eliminates idle time between measurements, and the high sequencing speed of the Q Exactive HF reduces required measurement time. We apply the pipeline to the yeast chromatin remodeling landscape and demonstrate quantification of 96 pull-downs of chromatin complexes in about 1 day. This is achieved with only 500 μg input material, enabling yeast cultivation in a 96-well format. Our system retrieved known complex-members and the high throughput allowed probing with many bait proteins. Even alternative complex compositions were detectable in these very short gradients. Thus, sample throughput, sensitivity and LC/MS-MS duty cycle are improved severalfold compared with established workflows. The pipeline can be extended to different types of interaction studies and to other medium complexity proteomes.Shotgun proteomics is concerned with the identification and quantification of proteins (13). Prior to analysis, the proteins are digested into peptides, resulting in highly complex mixtures. To deal with this complexity, the peptides are separated by liquid chromatography followed by online analysis with mass spectrometry (MS), today facilitating the characterization of almost complete cell line proteomes in a short time (35). In addition to the characterization of entire proteomes, there is also a great demand for analyzing low or medium complexity samples. Given the trend toward a systems biology view, relatively larges sets of samples often have to be measured. One such category of lower complexity protein mixtures occurs in the determination of physical interaction partners of a protein of interest, which requires the identification and quantification of the proteins “pulled-down” or immunoprecipitated via a bait protein. Protein interactions are essential for almost all biological processes and orchestrate a cell''s behavior by regulating enzymes, forming macromolecular assemblies and functionalizing multiprotein complexes that are capable of more complex behavior than the sum of their parts. The human genome has almost 20,000 protein encoding genes, and it has been estimated that 80% of the proteins engage in complex interactions and that 130,000 to 650,000 protein interactions can take place in a human cell (6, 7). These numbers demonstrate a clear need for systematic and high-throughput mapping of protein–protein interactions (PPIs) to understand these complexes.The introduction of generic methods to detect PPIs, such as the yeast two-hybrid screen (Y2H) (8) or affinity purification combined with mass spectrometry (AP-MS)1 (9), have revolutionized the protein interactomics field. AP-MS in particular has emerged as an important tool to catalogue interactions with the aim of better understanding basic biochemical mechanisms in many different organisms (1017). It can be performed under near-physiological conditions and is capable of identifying functional protein complexes (18). In addition, the combination of affinity purification with quantitative mass spectrometry has greatly improved the discrimination of true interactors from unspecific background binders, a long-standing challenge in the AP-MS field (1921). Nowadays, quantitative AP-MS is employed to address many different biological questions, such as detection of dynamic changes in PPIs upon perturbation (2225) or the impact of posttranslational signaling on PPIs (26, 27). Recent developments even make it possible to provide abundances and stoichiometry information of the bait and prey proteins under study, combined with quantitative data from very deep cellular proteomes. Furthermore, sample preparation in AP-MS can now be performed in high-throughput formats capable of producing hundreds of samples per day. With such throughput in sample generation, the LC-MS/MS part of the AP-MS pipeline has become a major bottleneck for large studies, limiting throughput to a small fraction of the available samples. In principle, this limitation could be circumvented by multiplexing analysis via isotope-labeling strategies (28, 29) or by drastically reducing the measurement time per sample (3032). The former strategy requires exquisite control of the processing steps and has not been widely implemented yet. The latter strategy depends on mass spectrometers with sufficiently high sequencing speed to deal with the pull-down in a very short time. Since its introduction about 10 years ago (33), the Orbitrap mass spectrometer has featured ever-faster sequencing capabilities, with the Q Exactive HF now reaching a peptide sequencing speed of up to 17 Hz (34). This should now make it feasible to substantially lower the amount of time spent per measurement.Although very short LC-MS/MS runs can in principle be used for high-throughput analyses, they usually lead to a drop in LC-MS duty cycle. This is because each sample needs initial washing, loading, and equilibration steps, independent of gradient time, which takes a substantial percentage for most LC setups - typically at least 15–20 min. To achieve a more efficient LC-MS duty cycle, while maintaining high sensitivity, a second analytical column can be introduced. This enables the parallelization of several steps related to sample loading and to the LC operating steps, including valve switching. Such dual analytical column or “double-barrel: setups have been described for various applications and platforms (30, 3539).Starting from the reported performance and throughput of workflows that are standard today (16, 21, 4042), we asked if it would be possible to obtain a severalfold increase in both sample throughput and sensitivity, as well as a considerable reduction in overall wet lab costs and working time. Specifically, our goal was to quantify 96 medium complexity samples in a single day. Such a number of samples can be processed with a 96-well plate, which currently is the format of choice for highly parallelized sample preparation workflows, often with a high degree of automation. We investigated which advances were needed in sample preparation, liquid chromatography, and mass spectrometry. Based on our findings, we developed a parallelized platform for high-throughput sample preparation and LC-MS/MS analysis, which we applied to pull-down samples from the yeast chromatin remodeling landscape. The extent of retrieval of known complex members served as a quality control of the developed pipeline.  相似文献   

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Early onset generalized dystonia (DYT1) is an autosomal dominant neurological disorder caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue (torsinA ΔE) in the C-terminal region of the AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) protein torsinA. The pathogenic mechanism by which torsinA ΔE mutation leads to dystonia remains unknown. Here we report the identification and characterization of a 628-amino acid novel protein, printor, that interacts with torsinA. Printor co-distributes with torsinA in multiple brain regions and co-localizes with torsinA in the endoplasmic reticulum. Interestingly, printor selectively binds to the ATP-free form but not to the ATP-bound form of torsinA, supporting a role for printor as a cofactor rather than a substrate of torsinA. The interaction of printor with torsinA is completely abolished by the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutation. Our findings suggest that printor is a new component of the DYT1 pathogenic pathway and provide a potential molecular target for therapeutic intervention in dystonia.Early onset generalized torsion dystonia (DYT1) is the most common and severe form of hereditary dystonia, a movement disorder characterized by involuntary movements and sustained muscle spasms (1). This autosomal dominant disease has childhood onset and its dystonic symptoms are thought to result from neuronal dysfunction rather than neurodegeneration (2, 3). Most DYT1 cases are caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue at positions 302 or 303 (torsinA ΔE) of the 332-amino acid protein torsinA (4). In addition, a different torsinA mutation that deletes amino acids Phe323–Tyr328 (torsinA Δ323–328) was identified in a single family with dystonia (5), although the pathogenic significance of this torsinA mutation is unclear because these patients contain a concomitant mutation in another dystonia-related protein, ϵ-sarcoglycan (6). Recently, genetic association studies have implicated polymorphisms in the torsinA gene as a genetic risk factor in the development of adult-onset idiopathic dystonia (7, 8).TorsinA contains an N-terminal endoplasmic reticulum (ER)3 signal sequence and a 20-amino acid hydrophobic region followed by a conserved AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) domain (9, 10). Because members of the AAA+ family are known to facilitate conformational changes in target proteins (11, 12), it has been proposed that torsinA may function as a molecular chaperone (13, 14). TorsinA is widely expressed in brain and multiple other tissues (15) and is primarily associated with the ER and nuclear envelope (NE) compartments in cells (1620). TorsinA is believed to mainly reside in the lumen of the ER and NE (1719) and has been shown to bind lamina-associated polypeptide 1 (LAP1) (21), lumenal domain-like LAP1 (LULL1) (21), and nesprins (22). In addition, recent evidence indicates that a significant pool of torsinA exhibits a topology in which the AAA+ domain faces the cytoplasm (20). In support of this topology, torsinA is found in the cytoplasm, neuronal processes, and synaptic terminals (2, 3, 15, 2326) and has been shown to bind cytosolic proteins snapin (27) and kinesin light chain 1 (20). TorsinA has been proposed to play a role in several cellular processes, including dopaminergic neurotransmission (2831), NE organization and dynamics (17, 22, 32), and protein trafficking (27, 33). However, the precise biological function of torsinA and its regulation remain unknown.To gain insights into torsinA function, we performed yeast two-hybrid screens to search for torsinA-interacting proteins in the brain. We report here the isolation and characterization of a novel protein named printor (protein interactor of torsinA) that interacts selectively with wild-type (WT) torsinA but not the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutant. Our data suggest that printor may serve as a cofactor of torsinA and provide a new molecular target for understanding and treating dystonia.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies have shown that protein-protein interactions among splicing factors may play an important role in pre-mRNA splicing. We report here identification and functional characterization of a new splicing factor, Sip1 (SC35-interacting protein 1). Sip1 was initially identified by virtue of its interaction with SC35, a splicing factor of the SR family. Sip1 interacts with not only several SR proteins but also with U1-70K and U2AF65, proteins associated with 5′ and 3′ splice sites, respectively. The predicted Sip1 sequence contains an arginine-serine-rich (RS) domain but does not have any known RNA-binding motifs, indicating that it is not a member of the SR family. Sip1 also contains a region with weak sequence similarity to the Drosophila splicing regulator suppressor of white apricot (SWAP). An essential role for Sip1 in pre-mRNA splicing was suggested by the observation that anti-Sip1 antibodies depleted splicing activity from HeLa nuclear extract. Purified recombinant Sip1 protein, but not other RS domain-containing proteins such as SC35, ASF/SF2, and U2AF65, restored the splicing activity of the Sip1-immunodepleted extract. Addition of U2AF65 protein further enhanced the splicing reconstitution by the Sip1 protein. Deficiency in the formation of both A and B splicing complexes in the Sip1-depleted nuclear extract indicates an important role of Sip1 in spliceosome assembly. Together, these results demonstrate that Sip1 is a novel RS domain-containing protein required for pre-mRNA splicing and that the functional role of Sip1 in splicing is distinct from those of known RS domain-containing splicing factors.Pre-mRNA splicing takes place in spliceosomes, the large RNA-protein complexes containing pre-mRNA, U1, U2, U4/6, and U5 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs), and a large number of accessory protein factors (for reviews, see references 21, 22, 37, 44, and 48). It is increasingly clear that the protein factors are important for pre-mRNA splicing and that studies of these factors are essential for further understanding of molecular mechanisms of pre-mRNA splicing.Most mammalian splicing factors have been identified by biochemical fractionation and purification (3, 15, 19, 3136, 45, 6971, 73), by using antibodies recognizing splicing factors (8, 9, 16, 17, 61, 66, 67, 74), and by sequence homology (25, 52, 74).Splicing factors containing arginine-serine-rich (RS) domains have emerged as important players in pre-mRNA splicing. These include members of the SR family, both subunits of U2 auxiliary factor (U2AF), and the U1 snRNP protein U1-70K (for reviews, see references 18, 41, and 59). Drosophila alternative splicing regulators transformer (Tra), transformer 2 (Tra2), and suppressor of white apricot (SWAP) also contain RS domains (20, 40, 42). RS domains in these proteins play important roles in pre-mRNA splicing (7, 71, 75), in nuclear localization of these splicing proteins (23, 40), and in protein-RNA interactions (56, 60, 64). Previous studies by us and others have demonstrated that one mechanism whereby SR proteins function in splicing is to mediate specific protein-protein interactions among spliceosomal components and between general splicing factors and alternative splicing regulators (1, 1a, 6, 10, 27, 63, 74, 77). Such protein-protein interactions may play critical roles in splice site recognition and association (for reviews, see references 4, 18, 37, 41, 47 and 59). Specific interactions among the splicing factors also suggest that it is possible to identify new splicing factors by their interactions with known splicing factors.Here we report identification of a new splicing factor, Sip1, by its interaction with the essential splicing factor SC35. The predicted Sip1 protein sequence contains an RS domain and a region with sequence similarity to the Drosophila splicing regulator, SWAP. We have expressed and purified recombinant Sip1 protein and raised polyclonal antibodies against the recombinant Sip1 protein. The anti-Sip1 antibodies specifically recognize a protein migrating at a molecular mass of approximately 210 kDa in HeLa nuclear extract. The anti-Sip1 antibodies sufficiently deplete Sip1 protein from the nuclear extract, and the Sip1-depleted extract is inactive in pre-mRNA splicing. Addition of recombinant Sip1 protein can partially restore splicing activity to the Sip1-depleted nuclear extract, indicating an essential role of Sip1 in pre-mRNA splicing. Other RS domain-containing proteins, including SC35, ASF/SF2, and U2AF65, cannot substitute for Sip1 in reconstituting splicing activity of the Sip1-depleted nuclear extract. However, addition of U2AF65 further increases splicing activity of Sip1-reconstituted nuclear extract, suggesting that there may be a functional interaction between Sip1 and U2AF65 in nuclear extract.  相似文献   

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There is an immediate need for improved methods to systematically and precisely quantify large sets of peptides in complex biological samples. To date protein quantification in biological samples has been routinely performed on triple quadrupole instruments operated in selected reaction monitoring mode (SRM), and two major challenges remain. Firstly, the number of peptides to be included in one survey experiment needs to be increased to routinely reach several hundreds, and secondly, the degree of selectivity should be improved so as to reliably discriminate the targeted analytes from background interferences. High resolution and accurate mass (HR/AM) analysis on the recently developed Q-Exactive mass spectrometer can potentially address these issues. This instrument presents a unique configuration: it is constituted of an orbitrap mass analyzer equipped with a quadrupole mass filter as the front-end for precursor ion mass selection. This configuration enables new quantitative methods based on HR/AM measurements, including targeted analysis in MS mode (single ion monitoring) and in MS/MS mode (parallel reaction monitoring). The ability of the quadrupole to select a restricted m/z range allows one to overcome the dynamic range limitations associated with trapping devices, and the MS/MS mode provides an additional stage of selectivity. When applied to targeted protein quantification in urine samples and benchmarked with the reference SRM technique, the quadrupole-orbitrap instrument exhibits similar or better performance in terms of selectivity, dynamic range, and sensitivity. This high performance is further enhanced by leveraging the multiplexing capability of the instrument to design novel acquisition methods and apply them to large targeted proteomic studies for the first time, as demonstrated on 770 tryptic yeast peptides analyzed in one 60-min experiment. The increased quality of quadrupole-orbitrap data has the potential to improve existing protein quantification methods in complex samples and address the pressing demand of systems biology or biomarker evaluation studies.Shotgun proteomics has emerged over the past decade as the most effective method for the qualitative study of complex proteomes (i.e., the identification of the protein content), as illustrated by a wealth of publications (1, 2). In this approach, after enzymatic digestion of the proteins, the generated peptides are analyzed by means of liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)1 in a data dependent mode. However, the complexity of the digested proteomes under investigation and the wide range of protein abundances limit the reproducibility and the sensitivity of this stochastic approach (3), which is critical if one aims at the systematic quantification of the proteins. Thus, alternative MS approaches have emerged for the systematic quantitative study of complex proteomes, the MS-based targeted proteomics (4). In this hypothesis-driven approach, only specific subsets of analytes (a few targeted peptides used as surrogates for the proteins of interest) are selectively measured in predefined m/z ranges and retention time windows, which overcomes the bias toward most abundant compounds commonly observed with shotgun proteomics. When applied to complex biological samples—for example, bodily fluids such as urine or plasma—targeted proteomics requires high performance instruments allowing measurements of a wide dynamic range (many orders of magnitude), with high sensitivity in order to detect peptides in the low amol range and sufficient selectivity to cope with massive biochemical background (5). Selected reaction monitoring (SRM) on triple quadrupole (6) or triple quadrupole-linear ion trap mass spectrometers (7) has emerged as a means to conduct such analyses (8). Initially applied in the MS analysis of small molecules (9, 10), SRM has gradually emerged as the reference quantitative technique for analyzing proteins (or peptides) in biological samples. When coupled with the isotope dilution strategy (11, 12), this very effective technique allows the precise quantification of proteins (1318). However, despite the increased selectivity provided by the two-stage mass filtering of SRM (at the precursor and fragment ion levels), the low resolution of mass selection does not allow the systematic removal of interferences (19, 20). Moreover, in proteomics, the biochemical background has a composition similar to that of the analytes of interest, which remains a major hurdle limiting the sensitivity of assays, especially in a bodily fluid matrix. High resolution/accurate mass (HR/AM) analysis represents a promising alternative approach that might more efficiently distinguish the compounds of interest from interferences in targeted proteomics. Such analyses can be conducted on orbitrap-based mass spectrometers because of their high sensitivity and high mass accuracy capabilities (21). The introduction of the benchtop standalone orbitrap mass spectrometer (Exactive) (22) further strengthened the attractiveness of the approach, especially in the field of small molecule analysis (23, 24). However, as quantification using trapping devices intrinsically suffers from a limited dynamic range because of the overall ion capacity, the complexity of biological samples remains very challenging even with the HR/AM approach (25). Targeted protein analysis with triple quadrupole mass spectrometers keeps on showing significant superiority for such samples.2 The recently developed quadrupole-orbitrap mass spectrometer (Q-Exactive) can potentially address this issue.3 It is constituted of an orbitrap mass analyzer equipped with a quadrupole mass filter as the front-end for precursor ion mass selection (26, 27). This configuration combines advantages of triple quadrupole instruments for mass filtering and orbitrap-based mass spectrometers for HR/AM measurement. The ability of the instrument to select a restricted m/z range or (sequentially) a small number of precursor ions offers new opportunities for quantification in complex samples by selectively enriching low abundant components. The resulting data, acquired in the so-called single ion monitoring (SIM) mode, fully benefit from the trapping capability while keeping a high acquisition rate as a result of the fast switching time between targeted precursor ions of the quadrupole. Although this mode of data acquisition is possible with a configuration combining a linear ion trap with the orbitrap (as in the LTQ-Orbitrap mass spectrometer), its effectiveness is far more limited in this case. The quadrupole-orbitrap configuration presents significant benefits by selectively isolating a narrow population of precursor ions. Other features of the instrument include its multiplexed trapping capability (26) using either the C-trap or the higher energy collisional dissociation (HCD) cell (28, 29), which opens new avenues in the design of innovative acquisition methods for quantification studies. For the first time, a panel of acquisition methods is designed and applied to targeted quantification at the MS and MS/MS levels. In the latter case, the simultaneous monitoring of multiple MS/MS fragmentation channels, also called parallel reaction monitoring4 (PRM), is particularly promising for quantifying large sets of peptides with increased selectivity.  相似文献   

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We report a novel strategy for studying synaptic pathology by concurrently measuring levels of four SNARE complex proteins from individual brain tissue samples. This method combines affinity purification and mass spectrometry and can be applied directly for studies of SNARE complex proteins in multiple species or modified to target other key elements in neuronal function. We use the technique to demonstrate altered levels of presynaptic proteins in Alzheimer disease patients and prion-infected mice.One prominent pathological feature of neuropsychiatric disorders such as Alzheimer disease (AD)1 is severe synaptic loss (13). Previous reports of AD patients have shown that presynaptic dysfunction might occur early in the disease process (1, 4). Cortical synapse pathology has also been shown to correlate to the severity of dementia more closely than other pathological hallmarks of AD such as plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (5, 6). The SNARE proteins are essential components for the regulation of neurotransmitter exocytosis at the presynaptic site (7). Animal models suggest that changed expression or modification of SNARE complex proteins (synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP-25), syntaxin-1, and vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)) alters synaptic function and is an interesting target for the development of therapeutics for neuropsychiatric illness (8, 9). The constituents of the SNARE complex are either localized in synaptic vesicles (VAMPs) or anchored at the presynaptic plasma membrane (SNAP-25 and syntaxin). The SNARE proteins are tightly assembled, and subsequent neurotransmitter release of the complex is quickly dissociated by N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (7, 1012). Because they are both strongly associated into complexes and membrane associated, the SNARE proteins are difficult to analyze via mass spectrometry, which is incompatible with most detergents necessary for the solubilization of proteins. Each SNARE complex protein exists in several isoforms that are differently distributed within the central nervous system (1318). Post-translational modifications and truncated variants of the SNARE proteins make investigation of the protein expression even more complicated.In this study we developed an approach for the characterization and concurrent quantification of SNARE complex proteins that combines affinity purification by immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry (IP-MS). We used precipitation with monoclonal antibodies against SNAP-25 to target the SNARE complex proteins and nanoflow LC–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to characterize the co-immunoprecipitated interaction partners. Selected reaction monitoring (SRM) on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer coupled to a microflow LC system was used for quantification of the SNARE proteins. To demonstrate the usability of the IP-MS method, we performed a comparison of SNARE complex protein levels in brain tissue from AD patients and age-matched controls, as well as a study of SNARE complex protein levels in brain tissue from prion-infected mice.  相似文献   

11.
Top-down proteomics is emerging as a viable method for the routine identification of hundreds to thousands of proteins. In this work we report the largest top-down study to date, with the identification of 1,220 proteins from the transformed human cell line H1299 at a false discovery rate of 1%. Multiple separation strategies were utilized, including the focused isolation of mitochondria, resulting in significantly improved proteome coverage relative to previous work. In all, 347 mitochondrial proteins were identified, including ∼50% of the mitochondrial proteome below 30 kDa and over 75% of the subunits constituting the large complexes of oxidative phosphorylation. Three hundred of the identified proteins were found to be integral membrane proteins containing between 1 and 12 transmembrane helices, requiring no specific enrichment or modified LC-MS parameters. Over 5,000 proteoforms were observed, many harboring post-translational modifications, including over a dozen proteins containing lipid anchors (some previously unknown) and many others with phosphorylation and methylation modifications. Comparison between untreated and senescent H1299 cells revealed several changes to the proteome, including the hyperphosphorylation of HMGA2. This work illustrates the burgeoning ability of top-down proteomics to characterize large numbers of intact proteoforms in a high-throughput fashion.Although traditional bottom-up approaches to mass-spectrometry-based proteomics are capable of identifying thousands of protein groups from a complex mixture, proteolytic digestion can result in the loss of information pertaining to post-translational modifications and sequence variants (1, 2). The recent implementation of top-down proteomics in a high-throughput format using either Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (35) or Orbitrap instruments (6, 7) has shown an increasing scale of applicability while preserving information on combinatorial modifications and highly related sequence variants. For example, the identification of over 500 bacterial proteins helped researchers find covalent switches on cysteines (7), and over 1,000 proteins were identified from human cells (3). Such advances have driven the detection of whole protein forms, now simply called proteoforms (8), with several laboratories now seeking to tie these to specific functions in cell and disease biology (911).The term “proteoform” denotes a specific primary structure of an intact protein molecule that arises from a specific gene and refers to a precise combination of genetic variation, splice variants, and post-translational modifications. Whereas special attention is required in order to accomplish gene- and variant-specific identifications via the bottom-up approach, top-down proteomics routinely links proteins to specific genes without the problem of protein inference. However, the fully automated characterization of whole proteoforms still represents a significant challenge in the field. Another major challenge is to extend the top-down approach to the study of whole integral membrane proteins, whose hydrophobicity can often limit their analysis via LC-MS (5, 1216). Though integral membrane proteins are often difficult to solubilize, the long stretches of sequence information provided from fragmentation of their transmembrane domains in the gas phase can actually aid in their identification (5, 13).In parallel to the early days of bottom-up proteomics a decade ago (1721), in this work we brought the latest methods for top-down proteomics into combination with subcellular fractionation and cellular treatments to expand coverage of the human proteome. We utilized multiple dimensions of separation and an Orbitrap Elite mass spectrometer to achieve large-scale interrogation of intact proteins derived from H1299 cells. For this focus issue on post-translational modifications, we report this summary of findings from the largest implementation of top-down proteomics to date, which resulted in the identification of 1,220 proteins and thousands more proteoforms. We also applied the platform to H1299 cells induced into senescence by treatment with the DNA-damaging agent camptothecin.  相似文献   

12.
A decoding algorithm is tested that mechanistically models the progressive alignments that arise as the mRNA moves past the rRNA tail during translation elongation. Each of these alignments provides an opportunity for hybridization between the single-stranded, -terminal nucleotides of the 16S rRNA and the spatially accessible window of mRNA sequence, from which a free energy value can be calculated. Using this algorithm we show that a periodic, energetic pattern of frequency 1/3 is revealed. This periodic signal exists in the majority of coding regions of eubacterial genes, but not in the non-coding regions encoding the 16S and 23S rRNAs. Signal analysis reveals that the population of coding regions of each bacterial species has a mean phase that is correlated in a statistically significant way with species () content. These results suggest that the periodic signal could function as a synchronization signal for the maintenance of reading frame and that codon usage provides a mechanism for manipulation of signal phase.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

13.
Significant progress in instrumentation and sample preparation approaches have recently expanded the potential of MALDI imaging mass spectrometry to the analysis of phospholipids and other endogenous metabolites naturally occurring in tissue specimens. Here we explore some of the requirements necessary for the successful analysis and imaging of phospholipids from thin tissue sections of various dimensions by MALDI time-of-flight mass spectrometry. We address methodology issues relative to the imaging of whole-body sections such as those cut from model laboratory animals, sections of intermediate dimensions typically prepared from individual organs, as well as the requirements for imaging areas of interests from these sections at a cellular scale spatial resolution. We also review existing limitations of MALDI imaging MS technology relative to compound identification. Finally, we conclude with a perspective on important issues relative to data exploitation and management that need to be solved to maximize biological understanding of the tissue specimen investigated.Since its introduction in the late 90s (1), MALDI imaging mass spectrometry (MS) technology has witnessed a phenomenal expansion. Initially introduced for the mapping of intact proteins from fresh frozen tissue sections (2), imaging MS is now routinely applied to a wide range of different compounds including peptides, proteins, lipids, metabolites, and xenobiotics (37). Numerous compound-specific sample preparation protocols and analytical strategies have been developed. These include tissue sectioning and handling (814), automated matrix deposition approaches and data acquisition strategies (1521), and the emergence of in situ tissue chemistries (2225). Originally performed on sections cut from fresh frozen tissue specimens, methodologies incorporating an in situ enzymatic digestion step prior to matrix application have been optimized to access the proteome locked in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue biopsies (2529). The possibility to use tissues preserved using non-cross-linking approaches has also been demonstrated (3032). These methodologies are of high importance for the study of numerous diseases because they potentially allow the retrospective analysis for biomarker validation and discovery of the millions of tissue biopsies currently stored worldwide in tissue banks and repositories.In the past decade, instrumentation for imaging MS has also greatly evolved. Whereas the first MS images were collected with time-of-flight instruments (TOF) capable of repetition rates of a few hertz, modern systems are today capable of acquiring data in the kilohertz range and above with improved sensitivity, mass resolving power, and accuracy, significantly reducing acquisition time and improving image quality (33, 34). Beyond time-of-flight analyzers, other MALDI-based instruments have been used such as ion traps (3537), Qq TOF instruments (3840), and trap-TOF (16, 41). Ion mobility technology has also been used in conjunction with imaging MS (4244). More recently, MALDI FT/ICR and Orbitrap mass spectrometers have been demonstrated to be extremely valuable instruments for the performance of imaging MS at very high mass resolving power (4547). These non-TOF-based systems have proven to be extremely powerful for the imaging of lower molecular weight compounds such as lipids, drugs, and metabolites. Home-built instrumentation and analytical approaches to probe tissues at higher spatial resolution (1–10 μm) have also been described (4850). In parallel to instrumentation developments, automated data acquisition, image visualization, and processing software packages have now also been developed by most manufacturers.To date, a wide range of biological systems have been studied using imaging MS as a primary methodology. Of strong interest are the organization and identification of the molecular composition of diseased tissues in direct correlation with the underlying histology and how it differs from healthy tissues. Such an approach has been used for the study of cancers (5154), neurologic disorders (5557), and other diseases (58, 59). The clinical potential of the imaging MS technology is enormous (7, 60, 61). Results give insights into the onset and progression of diseases, identify novel sets of disease-specific markers, and can provide a molecular confirmation of diagnosis as well as aide in outcome prediction (6264). Imaging MS has also been extensively used to study the development, functioning, and aging of different organs such as the kidney, prostate, epididymis, and eye lens (6570). Beyond the study of isolated tissues or organs, whole-body sections from several model animals such as leeches, mice, and rats have been investigated (7174). For these analyses, specialized instrumentation and protocols are necessary for tissue sectioning and handling (72, 73). Whole-body imaging MS opens the door to the study of the localization and accumulation of administered pharmaceuticals and their known metabolites at the level of entire organisms as well as the monitoring of their efficacy or toxicity as a function of time or dose (72, 73, 75, 76).There is considerable interest in determining the identification and localization of small biomolecules such as lipids in tissues because they are involved in many essential biological functions including cell signaling, energy storage, and membrane structure and function. Defects in lipid metabolism play a role in many diseases such as muscular dystrophy and cardiovascular disease. Phospholipids in tissues have been intensively studied by several groups (37, 40, 7783). In this respect, for optimal recovery of signal, several variables such as the choice of matrix for both imaging and fragmentation, solvent system, and instrument polarity have been investigated (20, 84). Particularly, the use of lithium cation adducts to facilitate phospholipid identification by tandem MS directly from tissue has also been reported (85). Of significant interest is the recent emergence of two new solvent-free matrix deposition approaches that perform exceptionally well for phospholipid imaging analyses. The first approach, described by Hankin et al. (86), consists in depositing the matrix on the sections through a sublimation process. The described sublimation system consists of sublimation glassware, a heated sand or oil bath (100–200 °C), and a primary vacuum pump (∼5 × 10−2 torr). Within a few minutes of initiating the sublimation process, an exceptionally homogeneous film of matrix forms on the section. The thickness of the matrix may be controlled by regulating pressure, temperature, and sublimation time. The second approach, described by Puolitaival et al.(87), uses a fine mesh sieve (≤20 μm) to filter finely ground matrix on the tissue sections. Agitation of the sieve results in passage of the matrix through the mesh and the deposition of a fairly homogeneous layer of submicrometer matrix crystals of the surface of the sections. The matrix density on the sections is controlled by direct observation using a standard light microscope. This matrix deposition approach was also found to be ideal to image certain drug compounds (88, 89). Both strategies allow very rapid production of homogeneous matrix coatings on tissue sections with a fairly inexpensive setup. Signal recovery was found to be comparable with those obtained by conventional spray deposition. With the appropriate size sublimation device or sieve, larger sections with dimensions of several centimeters such as those cut from mouse or rat whole bodies can also be rapidly and homogeneously coated.Here we present several examples of MALDI imaging MS of phospholipids from tissue sections using TOF mass spectrometers over a wide range of dimensions from whole-body sections (several centimeters), to individual organs (several millimeters), down to high spatial resolution imaging of selected tissue areas (hundreds of micrometers) at 10-μm lateral resolution and below. For all of these dimension ranges, technological considerations and practical aspects are discussed. In light of the imaging MS results, we also address issues faced for compound identification by tandem MS analysis performed directly on the sections. Finally, we discuss under “Perspective” our vision of the future of the field as well as the technological improvements and analytical tools that need to be improved upon and developed.  相似文献   

14.
Myofilament proteins are responsible for cardiac contraction. The myofilament subproteome, however, has not been comprehensively analyzed thus far. In the present study, cardiomyocytes were isolated from rodent hearts and stimulated with endothelin-1 and isoproterenol, potent inducers of myofilament protein phosphorylation. Subsequently, cardiomyocytes were “skinned,” and the myofilament subproteome was analyzed using a high mass accuracy ion trap tandem mass spectrometer (LTQ Orbitrap XL) equipped with electron transfer dissociation. As expected, a small number of myofilament proteins constituted the majority of the total protein mass with several known phosphorylation sites confirmed by electron transfer dissociation. More than 600 additional proteins were identified in the cardiac myofilament subproteome, including kinases and phosphatase subunits. The proteomic comparison of myofilaments from control and treated cardiomyocytes suggested that isoproterenol treatment altered the subcellular localization of protein phosphatase 2A regulatory subunit B56α. Immunoblot analysis of myocyte fractions confirmed that β-adrenergic stimulation by isoproterenol decreased the B56α content of the myofilament fraction in the absence of significant changes for the myosin phosphatase target subunit isoforms 1 and 2 (MYPT1 and MYPT2). Furthermore, immunolabeling and confocal microscopy revealed the spatial redistribution of these proteins with a loss of B56α from Z-disc and M-band regions but increased association of MYPT1/2 with A-band regions of the sarcomere following β-adrenergic stimulation. In summary, we present the first comprehensive proteomics data set of skinned cardiomyocytes and demonstrate the potential of proteomics to unravel dynamic changes in protein composition that may contribute to the neurohormonal regulation of myofilament contraction.Myofilament proteins comprise the fundamental contractile apparatus of the heart, the cardiac sarcomere. They are subdivided into thin filament proteins, including actin, tropomyosin, the troponin complex (troponin C, troponin I, and troponin T), and thick filament proteins, including myosin heavy chains, myosin light chains, and myosin-binding protein C. Although calcium is the principal regulator of cardiac contraction through the excitation-contraction coupling process that culminates in calcium binding to troponin C, myofilament function is also significantly modulated by phosphorylation of constituent proteins, such as cardiac troponin I (cTnI),1 cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C), and myosin regulatory light chain (MLC-2). “Skinned” myocyte preparations from rodent hearts, in which the sarcolemmal envelope is disrupted through the use of detergents, have been invaluable in providing mechanistic information on the functional consequences of myofilament protein phosphorylation following exposure to neurohormonal stimuli that activate pertinent kinases prior to skinning or direct exposure to such kinases in active form after skinning (for recent examples, see studies on the phosphorylation of cTnI (13), cMyBP-C (46), and MLC-2 (79)). Nevertheless, to date, only a few myofilament proteins have been studied using proteomics (1019), and a detailed proteomic characterization of the myofilament subproteome and its associated proteins from skinned myocytes has not been performed. In the present analysis, we used an LTQ Orbitrap XL equipped with ETD (20) to analyze the subproteome of skinned cardiomyocytes with or without prior stimulation. Endothelin-1 and isoproterenol were used to activate the endothelin receptor/protein kinase C and β-adrenoreceptor/protein kinase A pathway, respectively (21, 22). Importantly, the mass accuracy of the Orbitrap mass analyzer helped to distinguish true phosphorylation sites from false assignments, and the sensitivity of the ion trap provided novel insights into the translocation of phosphatase regulatory and targeting subunits following β-adrenergic stimulation.  相似文献   

15.
A Boolean network is a model used to study the interactions between different genes in genetic regulatory networks. In this paper, we present several algorithms using gene ordering and feedback vertex sets to identify singleton attractors and small attractors in Boolean networks. We analyze the average case time complexities of some of the proposed algorithms. For instance, it is shown that the outdegree-based ordering algorithm for finding singleton attractors works in time for , which is much faster than the naive time algorithm, where is the number of genes and is the maximum indegree. We performed extensive computational experiments on these algorithms, which resulted in good agreement with theoretical results. In contrast, we give a simple and complete proof for showing that finding an attractor with the shortest period is NP-hard.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

16.
17.
Hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) mass spectrometry is one of the two major principles used in proteomics. Although based on simple fundamentals, it has over the last decades greatly evolved in terms of achievable resolution, mass accuracy, and dynamic range. The Bruker impact platform of QTOF instruments takes advantage of these developments and here we develop and evaluate the impact II for shotgun proteomics applications. Adaption of our heated liquid chromatography system achieved very narrow peptide elution peaks. The impact II is equipped with a new collision cell with both axial and radial ion ejection, more than doubling ion extraction at high tandem MS frequencies. The new reflectron and detector improve resolving power compared with the previous model up to 80%, i.e. to 40,000 at m/z 1222. We analyzed the ion current from the inlet capillary and found very high transmission (>80%) up to the collision cell. Simulation and measurement indicated 60% transfer into the flight tube. We adapted MaxQuant for QTOF data, improving absolute average mass deviations to better than 1.45 ppm. More than 4800 proteins can be identified in a single run of HeLa digest in a 90 min gradient. The workflow achieved high technical reproducibility (R2 > 0.99) and accurate fold change determination in spike-in experiments in complex mixtures. Using label-free quantification we rapidly quantified haploid against diploid yeast and characterized overall proteome differences in mouse cell lines originating from different tissues. Finally, after high pH reversed-phase fractionation we identified 9515 proteins in a triplicate measurement of HeLa peptide mixture and 11,257 proteins in single measurements of cerebellum—the highest proteome coverage reported with a QTOF instrument so far.Building on the fundamental advance of the soft ionization techniques electrospray ionization and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (1, 2), MS-based proteomics has advanced tremendously over the last two decades (36). Bottom-up, shotgun proteomics is usually performed in a liquid chromatography-tandem MS (LC-MS/MS)1 format, where nanoscale liquid chromatography is coupled through electrospray ionization to an instrument capable of measuring a mass spectrum and fragmenting the recognized precursor peaks on the chromatographic time scale. Fundamental challenges of shotgun proteomics include the very large numbers of peptides that elute over relatively short periods and peptide abundances that vary by many orders of magnitude. Developments in mass spectrometers toward higher sensitivity, sequencing speed, and resolution were needed and helped to address these critical challenges (7, 8). Especially the introduction of the Orbitrap mass analyzers has advanced the state of the art of the field because of their very high resolution and mass accuracy (9, 10). A popular configuration couples a quadrupole mass filter for precursor selection to the Orbitrap analyzer in a compact benchtop format (1113).In addition to the improvements in MS instrumentation, there have been key advances in the entire proteomics workflow, from sample preparation through improved LC systems and in computational proteomics (1416). Together, such advances are making shotgun proteomics increasingly comprehensive and deep analyses can now be performed in a reasonable time (13, 1719). Nevertheless, complete analysis of all expressed proteins in a complex system remains extremely challenging and complete measurement of all the peptides produced in shotgun proteomics may not even be possible in principle (20, 21). Therefore, an urgent need for continued improvements in proteomics technology remains.Besides the Orbitrap analyzer and other ion trap technologies, the main alternative MS technology is time-of-flight, a technology that has been used for many decades in diverse fields. The configuration employed in proteomics laboratories combines a quadrupole mass filter via a collision cell and orthogonal acceleration unit to a reflectron and a multichannel plate (MCP) detector (22). TOF scans are generated in much less than a millisecond (ms), and a number of these “pulses” are added to obtain an MS or MS/MS spectrum with the desired signal to noise ratio. Our own laboratory has used such a quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) instrument as the main workhorse in proteomics for many years, but then switched to high-resolution trapping instruments because of their superior resolution and mass accuracy. However, TOF technology has fundamental attractions, such as the extremely high scan speed and the absence of space charge, which limits the number of usable ions in all trapping instruments. In principle, the high spectra rate makes TOF instruments capable of making use of the majority of ions, thus promising optimal sensitivity, dynamic range and hence quantification. It also means that TOF can naturally be interfaced with ion mobility devices, which typically separate ions on the ms time scale. Data independent analysis strategies such as MSE, in which all precursors are fragmented simultaneously (23, 24) or SWATH, in which the precursor ion window is rapidly cycled through the entire mass range (25), also make use of the high scanning speed offered by QTOF instruments. It appears that QTOFs are set to make a comeback in proteomics with recent examples showing impressive depth of coverage of complex proteomes. For instance, using a variant of the MSE method, identification of 5468 proteins was reported in HeLa cells in single shots and small sample amounts (26). In another report, employing ion mobility for better transmission of fragment ions to the detector led to the identification of up to 7548 proteins in human ovary tissue (27).In this paper, we describe the impact II™, a benchtop QTOF instrument from Bruker Daltonics, and its use in shotgun proteomics. This QTOF instrument is a member of an instrument family first introduced in 2008, which consists of the compact, the impact, and the maXis. The original impact was introduced in 2011 and was followed by the impact HD, which was equipped with a better digitizer, expanding the dynamic range of the detector. With the impact II, which became commercially available in 2014, we aimed to achieve a resolution and sequencing speed adequate for demanding shotgun proteomics experiments. To achieve this we developed an improved collision cell, orthogonal accelerator scheme, reflectron, and detector. Here we measure ion transmission characteristics of this instrument and the actually realized resolution and mass accuracy in typical proteomics experiments. Furthermore, we investigated the attainable proteome coverage in single shot analysis and we ask if QTOF performance is now sufficient for very deep characterization of complex cell line and tissue proteomes.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.  相似文献   

20.
A variety of high-throughput methods have made it possible to generate detailed temporal expression data for a single gene or large numbers of genes. Common methods for analysis of these large data sets can be problematic. One challenge is the comparison of temporal expression data obtained from different growth conditions where the patterns of expression may be shifted in time. We propose the use of wavelet analysis to transform the data obtained under different growth conditions to permit comparison of expression patterns from experiments that have time shifts or delays. We demonstrate this approach using detailed temporal data for a single bacterial gene obtained under 72 different growth conditions. This general strategy can be applied in the analysis of data sets of thousands of genes under different conditions.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]  相似文献   

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