Red blood cell proteomic profiling in mild and severe obstructive sleep apnea patients before and after positive airway pressure treatment.

Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis

Laboratório de Proteómica, Departamento de Genética Humana, Instituto Nacional de Saúde Dr. Ricardo Jorge - INSA, 1649-016 Lisboa, Portugal; Centro de Toxicogenómica e Saúde Humana (ToxOmics), Comprehensive Health Research Center (CHRC), Universidade Nova de Lisboa, 1150-082 Lisboa, Portugal. Electronic address:

Published: March 2025

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is characterized by recurrent-episodes of apneas/hypopneas during sleep, leading to recurrent intermittent-hypoxia and sleep fragmentation. Non-treated OSA can result in cardiometabolic diseases. In this study, we applied a shotgun-proteomics strategy to deeper investigate the red blood cell-(RBC) homeostasis regulation in the context of OSA-severity and their response to six months of positive airway pressure (PAP)-treatment. RBC-samples from patients with Mild/Severe-OSA before/after-PAP treatment and patients as simple-snoring controls were selected. The mass-spectrometry raw-data was analysed by MaxQuant for protein identification/quantification followed by statistical Linear Models-(LM) and Linear Mixed Models-(LMM) to investigate OSA-severity effect and interaction with PAP, respectively. The functional/biological network analysis were performed by DAVID-platform. The results indicated that key-enzymes of the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas (EMP)-glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway-(PPP) were differentially changed in Severe-OSA, suggesting that the O-dependent metabolic flux through EMP and PPP maybe compromised in these cells due to severe intermittent hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced oxidative-stress events in these patients. The Rapoport-Luebering-glycolytic shunt showed a significant downregulation across OSA-severity maybe to increase hemoglobin-O affinity to adapt to O low availability in the lung, although EMP-glycolysis showed decreased only in Severe-OSA. Proteins of the immunoproteasome were upregulated in Severe-OSA maybe to respond to severe oxidative-stress. In Mild-OSA, proteins related to the ubiquitination/neddylation-(Ub/Ned)-dependent proteasome system were upregulated. After PAP, proteins of Glycolysis and Ub/Ned-dependent proteasome system showed reactivated in Severe-OSA. In Mild-OSA, PAP induced upregulation of immunoproteasome proteins, suggesting that this treatment may increase oxidative-stress in these patients. Once validated these proteins maybe candidate biomarkers for OSA or OSA-therapy response.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbadis.2025.167767DOI Listing

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