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Membrane proteome characterization of periodontal ligament cell sets from deciduous and permanent teeth.

Journal of Periodontology 2018 November 30
BACKGROUND: Physiological roles for the periodontal ligament (PDL) include tooth eruption and anchorage, force absorption, and provision of proprioceptive information. Despite the advances in understanding the biology of PDL cells, there is a lack of information regarding the molecular signature of deciduous (DecPDL) and permanent (PermPDL) PDL tissues. Thus, the present study was designed to characterize the membrane proteome of DecPDL and PermPDL cells.

METHODS: Primary PDL cells were obtained (n = 6) and a label-free quantitative proteome of cell membrane-enriched components was performed. Proteome findings were validated by qPCR and Western blot assays in fresh human tissues (n = 8) and primary cell cultures (n = 6). In addition, confocal microscopy was used to verify the expression of target factors in the PDL cell cultures.

RESULTS: Comparative GO enrichment analysis evidenced that most stickling differences involved "Endomembrane system" (PICALM, STX4 and LRP10), "Hydrolase activity" (NCSTN and XRCC6), "Protein binding" (PICALM, STX4, GPNMB, VASP, ESYT2 and LRRC15), and "Isomerase activity" (FKBP8). Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD010226. At the transcript level, high PICALM in DecPDL and ESYT2 and LRRC15 in PermPDL were confirmed in fresh PDL tissues. Furthermore, Western blot analysis confirmed increased levels of PICALM, LRRC15 and ESYT2 in cells and/or fresh tissues, and confocal microscopy confirmed the trends for PICALM and LRRC15 expression in PDL cells.

CONCLUSION(S): We report the first comprehensive characterization of the membrane protein machinery of DecPDL and PermPDL cells, and together, we identified a distinct molecular signature for these cell populations, including unique proteins for DecPDL and PermPDL. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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