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Understanding how a small brain region, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), can synchronize the body''s circadian rhythms is an ongoing research area. This important time-keeping system requires a complex suite of peptide hormones and transmitters that remain incompletely characterized. Here, capillary liquid chromatography and FTMS have been coupled with tailored software for the analysis of endogenous peptides present in the SCN of the rat brain. After ex vivo processing of brain slices, peptide extraction, identification, and characterization from tandem FTMS data with <5-ppm mass accuracy produced a hyperconfident list of 102 endogenous peptides, including 33 previously unidentified peptides, and 12 peptides that were post-translationally modified with amidation, phosphorylation, pyroglutamylation, or acetylation. This characterization of endogenous peptides from the SCN will aid in understanding the molecular mechanisms that mediate rhythmic behaviors in mammals.Central nervous system neuropeptides function in cell-to-cell signaling and are involved in many physiological processes such as circadian rhythms, pain, hunger, feeding, and body weight regulation (14). Neuropeptides are produced from larger protein precursors by the selective action of endopeptidases, which cleave at mono- or dibasic sites and then remove the C-terminal basic residues (1, 2). Some neuropeptides undergo functionally important post-translational modifications (PTMs),1 including amidation, phosphorylation, pyroglutamylation, or acetylation. These aspects of peptide synthesis impact the properties of neuropeptides, further expanding their diverse physiological implications. Therefore, unveiling new peptides and unreported peptide properties is critical to advancing our understanding of nervous system function.Historically, the analysis of neuropeptides was performed by Edman degradation in which the N-terminal amino acid is sequentially removed. However, analysis by this method is slow and does not allow for sequencing of the peptides containing N-terminal PTMs (5). Immunological techniques, such as radioimmunoassay and immunohistochemistry, are used for measuring relative peptide levels and spatial localization, but these methods only detect peptide sequences with known structure (6). More direct, high throughput methods of analyzing brain regions can be used.Mass spectrometry, a rapid and sensitive method that has been used for the analysis of complex biological samples, can detect and identify the precise forms of neuropeptides without prior knowledge of peptide identity, with these approaches making up the field of peptidomics (712). The direct tissue and single neuron analysis by MALDI MS has enabled the discovery of hundreds of neuropeptides in the last decade, and the neuronal homogenate analysis by fractionation and subsequent ESI or MALDI MS has yielded an equivalent number of new brain peptides (5). Several recent peptidome studies, including the work by Dowell et al. (10), have used the specificity of FTMS for peptide discovery (10, 1315). Here, we combine the ability to fragment ions at ultrahigh mass accuracy (16) with a software pipeline designed for neuropeptide discovery. We use nanocapillary reversed-phase LC coupled to 12 Tesla FTMS for the analysis of peptides present in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of rat brain.A relatively small, paired brain nucleus located at the base of the hypothalamus directly above the optic chiasm, the SCN contains a biological clock that generates circadian rhythms in behaviors and homeostatic functions (17, 18). The SCN comprises ∼10,000 cellular clocks that are integrated as a tissue level clock which, in turn, orchestrates circadian rhythms throughout the brain and body. It is sensitive to incoming signals from the light-sensing retina and other brain regions, which cause temporal adjustments that align the SCN appropriately with changes in environmental or behavioral state. Previous physiological studies have implicated peptides as critical synchronizers of normal SCN function as well as mediators of SCN inputs, internal signal processing, and outputs; however, only a small number of peptides have been identified and explored in the SCN, leaving unresolved many circadian mechanisms that may involve peptide function.Most peptide expression in the SCN has only been studied through indirect antibody-based techniques (1929), although we recently used MS approaches to characterize several peptides detected in SCN releasates (30). Previous studies indicate that the SCN expresses a rich diversity of peptides relative to other brain regions studied with the same techniques. Previously used immunohistochemical approaches are not only inadequate for comprehensively evaluating PTMs and alternate isoforms of known peptides but are also incapable of exhaustively examining the full peptide complement of this complex biological network of peptidergic inputs and intrinsic components. A comprehensive study of SCN peptidomics is required that utilizes high resolution strategies for directly analyzing the peptide content of the neuronal networks comprising the SCN.In our study, the SCN was obtained from ex vivo coronal brain slices via tissue punch and subjected to multistage peptide extraction. The SCN tissue extract was analyzed by FTMS/MS, and the high resolution MS and MS/MS data were processed using ProSightPC 2.0 (16), which allows the identification and characterization of peptides or proteins from high mass accuracy MS/MS data. In addition, the Sequence Gazer included in ProSightPC was used for manually determining PTMs (31, 32). As a result, a total of 102 endogenous peptides were identified, including 33 that were previously unidentified, and 12 PTMs (including amidation, phosphorylation, pyroglutamylation, and acetylation) were found. The present study is the first comprehensive peptidomics study for identifying peptides present within the mammalian SCN. In fact, this is one of the first peptidome studies to work with discrete brain nuclei as opposed to larger brain structures and follows up on our recent report using LC-ion trap for analysis of the peptides in the supraoptic nucleus (33); here, the use of FTMS allows a greater range of PTMs to be confirmed and allows higher confidence in the peptide assignments. This information on the peptides in the SCN will serve as a basis to more exhaustively explore the extent that previously unreported SCN neuropeptides may function in SCN regulation of mammalian circadian physiology.  相似文献   

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