Premium
Dynamic urinary proteomic analysis reveals stable proteins to be potential biomarkers
Author(s) -
Sun Wei,
Chen Yong,
Li Fuxin,
Zhang Ling,
Yang Ruifeng,
Zhang Zhi,
Zheng Dexian,
Gao Youhe
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
proteomics – clinical applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1862-8354
pISSN - 1862-8346
DOI - 10.1002/prca.200800061
Subject(s) - proteome , urinary system , morning , urine , physiology , biology , computational biology , bioinformatics , medicine , endocrinology
Human urinary proteome analysis is a convenient and efficient approach for understanding disease processes affecting the kidney and urogenital tract. Many potential biomarkers have been identified in previous differential analyses; however, dynamic variations of the urinary proteome have not been intensively studied, and it is difficult to conclude that potential biomarkers are genuinely associated with disease rather then simply being physiological proteome variations. In this paper, pooled and individual urine samples were used to analyze dynamic variations in the urinary proteome. Five types of pooled samples (first morning void, second morning void, excessive water‐drinking void, random void, and 24 h void) collected in 1 day from six volunteers were used to analyze intra‐day variations. Six pairs of first morning voids collected a week apart were used to study inter‐day, inter‐individual, and inter‐gender variations. The intra‐day, inter‐day, inter‐individual, and inter‐gender variation analyses showed that many proteins were constantly present with relatively stable abundances, and some of these had earlier been reported as potential disease biomarkers. In terms of sensitivity, the main components of the five intra‐day urinary proteomes were similar, and the second morning void is recommended for clinical proteome analysis. The advantages and disadvantages of pooling samples are also discussed. The data presented describe a pool of stable urinary proteins seen under different physiological conditions. Any significant qualitative or quantitative changes in these stable proteins may mean that such proteins could serve as potential urinary biomarkers.