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Proteomic analysis of pure human airway gland mucus reveals a large component of protective proteins

Authors
Joo, N.S.Evans, I.A.T.Cho, H.-J.Park, I.-H.Engelhardt, J.F.Wine, J.J.
Issue Date
2015
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Citation
PLoS ONE, v.10, no.2
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PLoS ONE
Volume
10
Number
2
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/95907
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0116756
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Airway submucosal glands contribute to innate immunity and protect the lungs by secreting mucus, which is required for mucociliary clearance and which also contains antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, anti-proteolytic and anti-oxidant proteins. We stimulated glands in tracheal trimmings from three lung donors and collected droplets of uncontaminated mucus as they formed at the gland orifices under an oil layer. We analyzed the mucus using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Analysis identified 5486 peptides and 441 proteins from across the 3 samples (269-319 proteins per subject).We focused on 269 proteins common to at least 2 0f 3 subjects, of which 102 (38%) had protective or innate immunity functions. While many of these have long been known to play such roles, for many others their cellular protective functions have only recently been appreciated in addition to their well-studied biologic functions (e.g. annexins, apolipoproteins, gelsolin, hemoglobin, histones, keratins, and lumican). A minority of the identified proteins are known to be secreted via conventional exocytosis, suggesting that glandular secretion occurs via multiplemechanisms. Two of the observed protective proteins, major vault protein and prohibitin, have not been observed in fluid fromhuman epithelial cultures or in fluid fromnasal or bronchoalveolar lavage. Further proteomic analysis of pure gland mucus may help clarify how healthy airways maintain a sterile environment. © 2015 Joo et al.
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