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Proteomics reveals the effects of sustained weight loss on the human plasma proteome
Author(s) -
Geyer Philipp E,
Wewer Albrechtsen Nicolai J,
Tyanova Stefka,
Grassl Niklas,
Iepsen Eva W,
Lundgren Julie,
Madsbad Sten,
Holst Jens J,
Torekov Signe S,
Mann Matthias
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
molecular systems biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.523
H-Index - 148
ISSN - 1744-4292
DOI - 10.15252/msb.20167357
Subject(s) - proteome , proteomics , biology , adiponectin , blood proteins , apolipoprotein b , insulin resistance , weight loss , cohort , endocrinology , bioinformatics , medicine , obesity , biochemistry , cholesterol , gene
Sustained weight loss is a preferred intervention in a wide range of metabolic conditions, but the effects on an individual's health state remain ill‐defined. Here, we investigate the plasma proteomes of a cohort of 43 obese individuals that had undergone 8 weeks of 12% body weight loss followed by a year of weight maintenance. Using mass spectrometry‐based plasma proteome profiling, we measured 1,294 plasma proteomes. Longitudinal monitoring of the cohort revealed individual‐specific protein levels with wide‐ranging effects of losing weight on the plasma proteome reflected in 93 significantly affected proteins. The adipocyte‐secreted SERPINF 1 and apolipoprotein APOF 1 were most significantly regulated with fold changes of −16% and +37%, respectively ( P  < 10 −13 ), and the entire apolipoprotein family showed characteristic differential regulation. Clinical laboratory parameters are reflected in the plasma proteome, and eight plasma proteins correlated better with insulin resistance than the known marker adiponectin. Nearly all study participants benefited from weight loss regarding a ten‐protein inflammation panel defined from the proteomics data. We conclude that plasma proteome profiling broadly evaluates and monitors intervention in metabolic diseases.

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