Deep Single-Cell-Type Proteome Profiling of Mouse Brain by Nonsurgical AAV-Mediated Proximity Labeling

通过非手术 AAV 介导的邻近标记对小鼠脑进行深度单细胞类型蛋白质组分析

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作者:Xiaojun Sun, Huan Sun, Xian Han, Ping-Chung Chen, Yun Jiao, Zhiping Wu, Xue Zhang, Zhen Wang, Mingming Niu, Kaiwen Yu, Danting Liu, Kaushik Kumar Dey, Ariana Mancieri, Yingxue Fu, Ji-Hoon Cho, Yuxin Li, Suresh Poudel, Tess C Branon, Alice Y Ting, Junmin Peng

Abstract

Proteome profiling is a powerful tool in biological and biomedical studies, starting with samples at bulk, single-cell, or single-cell-type levels. Reliable methods for extracting specific cell-type proteomes are in need, especially for the cells (e.g., neurons) that cannot be readily isolated. Here, we present an innovative proximity labeling (PL) strategy for single-cell-type proteomics of mouse brain, in which TurboID (an engineered biotin ligase) is used to label almost all proteins in a specific cell type. This strategy bypasses the requirement of cell isolation and includes five major steps: (i) constructing recombinant adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) to express TurboID driven by cell-type-specific promoters, (ii) delivering the AAV to mouse brains by direct intravenous injection, (iii) enhancing PL labeling by biotin administration, (iv) purifying biotinylated proteins, followed by on-bead protein digestion, and (v) quantitative tandem-mass-tag (TMT) labeling. We first confirmed that TurboID can label a wide range of cellular proteins in human HEK293 cells and optimized the single-cell-type proteomic pipeline. To analyze specific brain cell types, we generated recombinant AAVs to coexpress TurboID and mCherry proteins, driven by neuron- or astrocyte-specific promoters and validated the expected cell expression by coimmunostaining of mCherry and cellular markers. Subsequent biotin purification and TMT analysis identified ∼10,000 unique proteins from a few micrograms of protein samples with excellent reproducibility. Comparative and statistical analyses indicated that these PL proteomes contain cell-type-specific cellular pathways. Although PL was originally developed for studying protein-protein interactions and subcellular proteomes, we extended it to efficiently tag the entire proteomes of specific cell types in the mouse brain using TurboID biotin ligase. This simple, effective in vivo approach should be broadly applicable to single-cell-type proteomics.

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