AI Article Synopsis

  • Serine hydrolases (SHs) are crucial enzymes involved in various health and disease processes, making them important targets for therapeutics, and activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) has emerged as a method to study their roles through fluorescent imaging and mass spectrometry.
  • The study presented enhances ABPP by applying it to glioma brain cryosections, allowing for detailed imaging of SH activity in the tumor microenvironment while identifying specific tumor-associated cell types.
  • Findings reveal increased SH activity in glioma tissues compared to normal brain, specifically highlighting the contribution of tumor-associated neutrophils over macrophages, showcasing the effectiveness of this advanced ABPP technique for studying complex biological systems.

Article Abstract

Background: Serine hydrolases (SHs) are a functionally diverse family of enzymes playing pivotal roles in health and disease and have emerged as important therapeutic targets in many clinical conditions. Activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) using fluorophosphonate (FP) probes has been a powerful chemoproteomic approach in studies unveiling roles of SHs in various biological systems. ABPP utilizes cell/tissue proteomes and features the FP-warhead, linked to a fluorescent reporter for in-gel fluorescence imaging or a biotin tag for streptavidin enrichment and LC-MS/MS-based target identification. Existing ABPP approaches characterize global SH activity based on mobility in gel or MS-based target identification and cannot reveal the identity of the cell-type responsible for an individual SH activity originating from complex proteomes.

Results: Here, by using an activity probe with broad reactivity towards the SH family, we advance the ABPP methodology to glioma brain cryosections, enabling for the first time high-resolution confocal fluorescence imaging of global SH activity in the tumor microenvironment. Tumor-associated cell types were identified by extensive immunohistochemistry on activity probe-labeled sections. Tissue-ABPP indicated heightened SH activity in glioma vs. normal brain and unveiled activity hotspots originating from tumor-associated neutrophils (TANs), rather than tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). Thorough optimization and validation was provided by parallel gel-based ABPP combined with LC-MS/MS-based target verification.

Conclusions: Our study advances the ABPP methodology to tissue sections, enabling high-resolution confocal fluorescence imaging of global SH activity in anatomically preserved complex native cellular environment. To achieve global portrait of SH activity throughout the section, a probe with broad reactivity towards the SH family members was employed. As ABPP requires no a priori knowledge of the identity of the target, we envisage no imaginable reason why the presently described approach would not work for sections regardless of species and tissue source.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7073015PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12575-020-00118-4DOI Listing

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