Human Protein Atlas of redox systems — What can be learnt?
☆
Pascal Dammeyer, Elias S.J. Arnér ⁎
Division of Biochemistry, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, SE-171 77 Stockholm, Sweden
abstract article info
Article history:
Received 23 April 2010
Received in revised form 8 July 2010
Accepted 11 July 2010
Available online 18 July 2010
Keywords:
Redox
Immunohistochemistry
Human
Thioredoxin
Glutathione
Peroxiredoxin
Background: High-throughput screening projects are popular approaches to yield a vast amount of
information amenable for database mining and “hypothesis generation”. The keys to success for these
approaches depend upon the quality of primary data, choice of algorithms for data analyses, solidity in data
annotations and the general usefulness of the results. A large initiative aimed at mapping the expression of
all human proteins is the Human Protein Atlas (www.proteinatlas.org), encompassing immunohistochemical
analyses of human tissues utilizing antibodies raised against a large number of human proteins. Here, we
wished to probe what could be learnt from this atlas using a manual in-depth analysis of the results
regarding the expression of key proteins in the human glutathione and thioredoxin systems.
Methods: The freely available on-line data of immunohistochemical analyses for selected human redox proteins
within the Human Protein Atlas were here analyzed, provided that reasonably solid data existed for the
antibodies that were employed. This included tissue expression data for thioredoxin 1 (Trx1), Trx2, thioredoxin
reductase 1 (TrxR1), TrxR2, glutathione reductase (GR), glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), γ-
glutamyl cysteinyl synthase (gGCS) and the six peroxiredoxins Prx1 to Prx6. The data were further
complemented with a screen using a polyclonal peptide antibody raised against the unique glutaredoxin
domain of TXNRD1_v3 (“v3”). The results from fifteen major tissues and organs are presented (lung, kidney,
liver, lymph node, testis, prostate, ovary, breast, pancreas, cerebellum, hippocampus, cerebral cortex, skin,
skeletal muscle and heart muscle) and discussed considering earlier findings described in the literature.
Results: Staining patterns proved to be highly variable and often unexpected both in terms of tissues analyzed
and the individual target proteins. Among the analyzed tissues, only macrophages of the lung, tubular cells of
the kidney, lymphoid cells of lymph nodes, Leydig cells in the testis, glandular cells of the prostate and exocrine
glandular cells of the pancreas, showed positive staining with all of the fourteen antibodies that were analyzed.
Among these antibodies, those against Trx1, TrxR2 and G6PD showed the most restricted staining across
different tissues, while others including the antibodies against Trx2, TrxR1, GR, Prx3, Prx4 and Prx6 gave strong
staining in most tissues. Staining for v3 was strong in many cells and tissues, which was unexpected
considering previous results mapping transcripts for this protein. No obvious co-variation in staining across
tissues could be noted when comparing any two of the analyzed antibodies. Staining for G6PD was weak in
most tissues, except for cells of the seminiferous ducts in testis and follicular cells of the ovary, where G6PD
staining was strong.
Conclusions: Results from high-throughput screening projects such as the Human Protein Atlas must be taken
with caution and need to be duly confirmed by thorough in-depth follow-up studies. The varying staining
intensities comparing tissues as seen here for most of the analyzed antibodies nonetheless suggest that the
overall profile of the human redox systems may vary significantly between different cell types and between
different tissues.
General significance: The Human Protein Atlas data suggest that the individual proteins of the human
thioredoxin and glutathione systems may be strikingly tissue- and cell type-specific in terms of expression
levels, but we also conclude that these type of high-throughput results should be taken with significant caution
and must be duly verified using subsequent focused and detailed hypothesis-guided follow-up studies.
This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Human and Murine Redox Protein Atlases.
© 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
1.1. The Human Protein Atlas
The Human Protein Atlas (HPA) is a high-throughput initiative
providing a freely available web-based service (www.proteinatlas.org)
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1810 (2011) 111–138
☆ This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Human and Murine Redox Protein
Atlases.
⁎ Corresponding author. Tel.: + 46 8 5248 69 83.
E-mail address: Elias.Arner@ki.se (E.S.J. Arnér).
0304-4165/$ – see front matter © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.bbagen.2010.07.004
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