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Proteomic profiling of the hypothalamus in two mouse models of narcolepsy
Authors:Sausan Azzam  Daniela Schlatzer  David Nethery  Dania Saleh  Xiaolin Li  Afaf Akladious  Mark R. Chance  Kingman P. Strohl
Affiliation:1. Center for Proteomics and Bioinformatics, Department of Nutrition, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA;2. Pulmonary Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA;3. Kent State University, Kent, OH, USA;4. Medical Service, Louis Stokes Cleveland DVA Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA;5. Department of Medicine, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA
Abstract:Narcolepsy is a disabling neurological disorder of sleepiness linked to the loss of neurons producing orexin neuropeptides in the hypothalamus. Two well‐characterized phenotypic mouse models of narcolepsy, loss‐of‐function (orexin‐knockout), and progressive loss of orexin (orexin/ataxin‐3) exist. The open question is whether the proteomics signatures of the hypothalamus would be different between the two models. To address this gap, we utilized a label‐free proteomics approach and conducted a hypothalamic proteome analysis by comparing each disease model to that of wild type. Following data processing and statistical analysis, 14 484 peptides mapping to 2282 nonredundant proteins were identified, of which 39 proteins showed significant differences in protein expression across groups. Altered proteins in both models showed commonalties in pathways for mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal degeneration, as well as altered proteins related to inflammatory demyelination, insulin resistance, metabolic responses, and the dopaminergic and monoaminergic systems. Model‐specific alterations in insulin degraded enzyme (IDE) and synaptosomal‐associated protein‐25 were unique to orexin‐KO and orexin/ataxin‐3, respectively. For both models, proteomics not only identified clinically suspected consequences of orexin loss on energy homeostasis and neurotransmitter systems, but also identified commonalities in inflammation and degeneration despite the entirely different genetic basis of the two mouse models.
Keywords:Hypothalamus  Mouse models  Narcolepsy  Orexin  Proteomics
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