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Proteomic Analyses of Cysteine Redox in High-Fat-Fed and Fasted Mouse Livers: Implications for Liver Metabolic Homeostasis
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Citations
33
References
2017
Year
Lipid PeroxidationMetabolomic ProfilingFatty Liver DiseaseRedox BiologyOxidative StressMetabolic SyndromeMetabolic SignalingProteomicsLiver MetabolismHuman MetabolismHealth SciencesRedox SignalingBiochemistryMedicineLiver PhysiologyLiverCysteine ResiduesHepatologyPhysiologyMetabolic RegulationLiver Metabolic HomeostasisIntensive Oxidative StressLiver DiseaseCysteine RedoxMetabolic ProfilingMetabolismProteomic Analyses
Intensive oxidative stress occurs during high-fat-diet-induced hepatic fat deposition, suggesting a critical role for redox signaling in liver metabolism. Intriguingly, evidence shows that fasting could also result in redox-profile changes largely through reduced oxidant or increased antioxidant levels. However, a comprehensive landscape of redox-modified hepatic substrates is lacking, thereby hindering our understanding of liver metabolic homeostasis. We employed a proteomic approach combining iodoacetyl tandem mass tag and nanoliquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry to quantitatively probe the effects of high-fat feeding and fasting on in vivo redox-based cysteine modifications. Compared with control groups, ∼60% of cysteine residues exhibited downregulated oxidation ratios by fasting, whereas ∼94% of these ratios were upregulated by high-fat feeding. Importantly, in fasted livers, proteins exhibiting diminished cysteine oxidation were annotated in pathways associated with fatty acid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, insulin, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors, and oxidative respiratory chain signaling, suggesting that fasting-induced redox changes targeted major metabolic pathways and consequently resulted in hepatic lipid accumulation.
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