Biology:Secretome

From HandWiki

The secretome is the set of proteins expressed by an organism and secreted into the extracellular space. In humans, this subset of the proteome encompasses 13-20% of all proteins, including cytokines, growth factors, extracellular matrix proteins and regulators, and shed receptors. The secretome of a specific tissue can be measured by mass spectrometry and its analysis constitutes a type of proteomics known as secretomics.

Definition

The term secretome was coined by Tjalsma and colleagues in 2004 to denote all the factors secreted by a cell, along with the secretory pathway constituents.[1] In 2010, this definition of secretome was revised to include only proteins secreted into the extracellular space.[2] Related concepts include the matrisome, which is the subset of the secretome that includes extracellular matrix proteins and their associated proteins;[3] the receptome, which includes all membrane receptors,[4] and the adhesome, which includes all proteins involved in cell adhesion.[5][6]

Quantification

The secreted proteins in humans account for 13–20% of the entire proteome and include growth factors, chemokines, cytokines, adhesion molecules, proteases and shed receptors.[2] Human protein-coding genes (39%, 19613 genes[7]) are predicted to have either a signal peptide and/or at least one transmembrane region suggesting active transport of the corresponding protein out of the cell (secretion) or location in one of the numerous membrane systems in the cell. Increasing evidence showed that, in addition to the protein cargo, non-protein components, such as lipid, micro-RNAs and messenger-RNA, could also be secreted by cells via both microvesicles (100–>1000 nm diameter) − shedding from the plasma membrane − and exosomes (30–150 nm diameter) − released via endosomal-exocytosis event.[8] Factors present in both these organelles accounts for up to 42% of the secretome and have been incorporated as the collective secretome.[9] There is a vast array of methodologies available to study cell secretomes of plant cells, mammalian cells, stem cells and cancer cells.[9]

See also

References

  1. Tjalsma, H.; Antelmann, H.; Jongbloed, J. D.H.; Braun, P. G.; Darmon, E.; Dorenbos, R.; Dubois, J.-Y. F.; Westers, H. et al. (8 June 2004). "Proteomics of Protein Secretion by Bacillus subtilis: Separating the "Secrets" of the Secretome". Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews 68 (2): 207–233. doi:10.1128/MMBR.68.2.207-233.2004. PMID 15187182. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Plant secretome: unlocking secrets of the secreted proteins". Proteomics 10 (4): 799–827. February 2010. doi:10.1002/pmic.200900514. PMID 19953550. 
  3. Hynes, R. O.; Naba, A. (21 September 2011). "Overview of the Matrisome--An Inventory of Extracellular Matrix Constituents and Functions". Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology 4 (1): a004903. doi:10.1101/cshperspect.a004903. PMID 21937732. 
  4. Ben-Shlomo, I.; Yu Hsu, S.; Rauch, R.; Kowalski, H. W.; Hsueh, A. J. W. (17 June 2003). "Signaling Receptome: A Genomic and Evolutionary Perspective of Plasma Membrane Receptors Involved in Signal Transduction". Science Signaling 2003 (187): re9. doi:10.1126/stke.2003.187.re9. PMID 12815191. 
  5. Zaidel-Bar, Ronen; Itzkovitz, Shalev; Ma'ayan, Avi; Iyengar, Ravi; Geiger, Benjamin (August 2007). "Functional atlas of the integrin adhesome". Nature Cell Biology 9 (8): 858–867. doi:10.1038/ncb0807-858. PMID 17671451. 
  6. Horton, Edward R.; Byron, Adam; Askari, Janet A.; Ng, Daniel H. J.; Millon-Frémillon, Angélique; Robertson, Joseph; Koper, Ewa J.; Paul, Nikki R. et al. (19 October 2015). "Definition of a consensus integrin adhesome and its dynamics during adhesion complex assembly and disassembly". Nature Cell Biology 17 (12): 1577–1587. doi:10.1038/ncb3257. PMID 26479319. 
  7. "Proteomics. Tissue-based map of the human proteome". Science 347 (6220): 1260419. January 2015. doi:10.1126/science.1260419. PMID 25613900. 
  8. "Extracellular vesicle isolation and characterization: toward clinical application". The Journal of Clinical Investigation 126 (4): 1152–62. April 2016. doi:10.1172/JCI81129. PMID 27035807. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Methodologies to decipher the cell secretome". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics 1834 (11): 2226–32. November 2013. doi:10.1016/j.bbapap.2013.01.022. PMID 23376189. 

Further reading