Methionine-induced hyperhomocysteinemia and bleomycin hydrolase deficiency alter the expression of mouse kidney proteins involved in renal disease.
Schlüsselwörter
Abstrakt
METHODS
Hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) induced by dietary or genetic factors is linked to kidney disease. Bleomycin hydrolase (Blmh) metabolizes Hcy-thiolactone to Hcy. We aimed to explain the role of dietary HHcy in kidney disease.
RESULTS
We examined kidney proteome in dietary HHcy and Blmh-knockout mouse models using 2D IEF/SDS-PAGE gel electrophoresis and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. We found that the kidney proteome was altered by dietary HHcy and the Blmh(-/-) genotype. Proteins involved in metabolism of lipoprotein (ApoA1), amino acid and protein (Acy1, Hspd1), carbohydrate (Pdhb, Fbp1-isoform 1, Eno1), and energy metabolism (Ndufs8, Ldhd) were down-regulated. Proteins involved in carbohydrate metabolism (Fbp1-isoform 2), oxidative stress response (Prdx2), and detoxification (Glod4) were up-regulated. The Blmh(-/-) genotype down-regulated Glod4 isoform 3 mRNA but did not affect isoform 1 mRNA expression in mouse kidneys, suggesting post-transcriptional regulation of the Glod4 protein by the Blmh(+/+) genotype. Responses of ApoA1, Acy1, Hspd1, Ndufs8, Fbp1, Eno1, and Prdx2 to HHcy and/or Blmh deficiency mimic their responses to renal disease.
CONCLUSIONS
Our findings indicate that Blmh interacts with diverse cellular processes--lipoprotein, amino acid and protein, carbohydrate, and energy metabolisms, detoxification, antioxidant defenses--that are essential for normal kidney homeostasis and that deregulation of these processes can account for the involvement of HHcy in kidney disease.