Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes

Abstract Background Early-life stress in the form of maternal separation can be associated with alterations in offspring neurodevelopment and brain functioning. Here, we aimed to investigate the potential impact of prolonged maternal separation on proteomic profiling of prefrontal cortex, hippocampu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zdenka Drastichova, Vladimir Rudajev, Gergely Pallag, Jiri Novotny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:Biological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40659-021-00327-5
id doaj-7244165e1abd437f89413f0d0ec1a928
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7244165e1abd437f89413f0d0ec1a9282021-02-14T12:09:29ZengBMCBiological Research0717-62872021-02-0154113210.1186/s40659-021-00327-5Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processesZdenka Drastichova0Vladimir Rudajev1Gergely Pallag2Jiri Novotny3Department of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Charles UniversityDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Charles UniversityDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Charles UniversityDepartment of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Charles UniversityAbstract Background Early-life stress in the form of maternal separation can be associated with alterations in offspring neurodevelopment and brain functioning. Here, we aimed to investigate the potential impact of prolonged maternal separation on proteomic profiling of prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of juvenile and young adult rats. A special attention was devoted to proteins involved in the process of cell death and redox state maintenance. Methods Long-Evans pups were separated from their mothers for 3 h daily over the first 3 weeks of life (during days 2–21 of age). Brain tissue samples collected from juvenile (22-day-old) and young adult (90-day-old) rats were used for label-free quantitative (LFQ) proteomic analysis. In parallel, selected oxidative stress markers and apoptosis-related proteins were assessed biochemically and by Western blot, respectively. Results In total, 5526 proteins were detected in our proteomic analysis of rat brain tissue. Approximately one tenth of them (586 proteins) represented those involved in cell death processes or regulation of oxidative stress balance. Prolonged maternal separation caused changes in less than half of these proteins (271). The observed alterations in protein expression levels were age-, sex- and brain region-dependent. Interestingly, the proteins detected by mass spectrometry that are known to be involved in the maintenance of redox state were not markedly altered. Accordingly, we did not observe any significant differences between selected oxidative stress markers, such as the levels of hydrogen peroxide, reduced glutathione, protein carbonylation and lipid peroxidation in brain samples from rats that underwent maternal separation and from the corresponding controls. On the other hand, a number of changes were found in cell death-associated proteins, mainly in those involved in the apoptotic and autophagic pathways. However, there were no detectable alterations in the levels of cleaved products of caspases or Bcl-2 family members. Taken together, these data indicate that the apoptotic and autophagic cell death pathways were not activated by maternal separation either in adolescent or young adult rats. Conclusion Prolonged maternal separation can distinctly modulate expression profiles of proteins associated with cell death pathways in prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of juvenile rats and the consequences of early-life stress may last into adulthood and likely participate in variations in stress reactivity.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40659-021-00327-5Maternal separationBrainProteomicsCell deathsOxidative stress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zdenka Drastichova
Vladimir Rudajev
Gergely Pallag
Jiri Novotny
spellingShingle Zdenka Drastichova
Vladimir Rudajev
Gergely Pallag
Jiri Novotny
Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
Biological Research
Maternal separation
Brain
Proteomics
Cell deaths
Oxidative stress
author_facet Zdenka Drastichova
Vladimir Rudajev
Gergely Pallag
Jiri Novotny
author_sort Zdenka Drastichova
title Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
title_short Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
title_full Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
title_fullStr Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
title_full_unstemmed Proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
title_sort proteome profiling of different rat brain regions reveals the modulatory effect of prolonged maternal separation on proteins involved in cell death-related processes
publisher BMC
series Biological Research
issn 0717-6287
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Early-life stress in the form of maternal separation can be associated with alterations in offspring neurodevelopment and brain functioning. Here, we aimed to investigate the potential impact of prolonged maternal separation on proteomic profiling of prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of juvenile and young adult rats. A special attention was devoted to proteins involved in the process of cell death and redox state maintenance. Methods Long-Evans pups were separated from their mothers for 3 h daily over the first 3 weeks of life (during days 2–21 of age). Brain tissue samples collected from juvenile (22-day-old) and young adult (90-day-old) rats were used for label-free quantitative (LFQ) proteomic analysis. In parallel, selected oxidative stress markers and apoptosis-related proteins were assessed biochemically and by Western blot, respectively. Results In total, 5526 proteins were detected in our proteomic analysis of rat brain tissue. Approximately one tenth of them (586 proteins) represented those involved in cell death processes or regulation of oxidative stress balance. Prolonged maternal separation caused changes in less than half of these proteins (271). The observed alterations in protein expression levels were age-, sex- and brain region-dependent. Interestingly, the proteins detected by mass spectrometry that are known to be involved in the maintenance of redox state were not markedly altered. Accordingly, we did not observe any significant differences between selected oxidative stress markers, such as the levels of hydrogen peroxide, reduced glutathione, protein carbonylation and lipid peroxidation in brain samples from rats that underwent maternal separation and from the corresponding controls. On the other hand, a number of changes were found in cell death-associated proteins, mainly in those involved in the apoptotic and autophagic pathways. However, there were no detectable alterations in the levels of cleaved products of caspases or Bcl-2 family members. Taken together, these data indicate that the apoptotic and autophagic cell death pathways were not activated by maternal separation either in adolescent or young adult rats. Conclusion Prolonged maternal separation can distinctly modulate expression profiles of proteins associated with cell death pathways in prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of juvenile rats and the consequences of early-life stress may last into adulthood and likely participate in variations in stress reactivity.
topic Maternal separation
Brain
Proteomics
Cell deaths
Oxidative stress
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40659-021-00327-5
work_keys_str_mv AT zdenkadrastichova proteomeprofilingofdifferentratbrainregionsrevealsthemodulatoryeffectofprolongedmaternalseparationonproteinsinvolvedincelldeathrelatedprocesses
AT vladimirrudajev proteomeprofilingofdifferentratbrainregionsrevealsthemodulatoryeffectofprolongedmaternalseparationonproteinsinvolvedincelldeathrelatedprocesses
AT gergelypallag proteomeprofilingofdifferentratbrainregionsrevealsthemodulatoryeffectofprolongedmaternalseparationonproteinsinvolvedincelldeathrelatedprocesses
AT jirinovotny proteomeprofilingofdifferentratbrainregionsrevealsthemodulatoryeffectofprolongedmaternalseparationonproteinsinvolvedincelldeathrelatedprocesses
_version_ 1724270994256822272