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ZenoSWATH DIA proteomics and clustering analysis of the effect of cysteamine at the cellular level in cystinotic fibroblasts.

Ortea, Ignacio; Rodríguez Martínez, Lorena; Carrera, Mónica; Fafián Labora, Juan A; Arufe Gonda, Mª del Carmen; González Barcia, Miguel; Fernández Ferreiro, Anxo; Mateos Martín, Jesús
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/20181
PMID: 39504626
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2024.117650
ESSN: 1950-6007
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1-s2.0-S0753332224015361-main.pdf (5.918Mb)
Date issued
2024-12
Journal title
Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie
Type of content
Artigo
Abstract
Cysteamine, an aminothiol, is the only available treatment for cystinosis, an incurable metabolic recessive disease characterized by detrimental symptoms at the renal, ocular, and muscular levels. Cystinosis is due to mutations in the CTNS gene encoding for the lysosomal symporter cystinosine. Cysteamine treatment only delays the symptoms, presents undesirable side effects and the patients depend on it for life. Thus, it is of paramount importance to find new complementary therapeutic targets for the disease, as well as to understand, at the molecular level, both the beneficial and detrimental effects of cysteamine. Here, we have used ZenoSWATH DIA proteomics and clustering analysis to unravel the differences between cystinotic and non-cystinotic skin fibroblasts, and to study the effect of increasing concentrations of cysteamine. Cystinotic cells present significant differences in proteins related to extracellular matrix structure and detoxification. Only a subset of those proteins is reversed by cysteamine in a dose-dependent manner, partially providing an explanation for its therapeutic benefits. Finally, cysteamine per se alters the levels of a group of lysosomal proteins that are not modulated in basal conditions. Our results will be helpful to understand the benefits, deficiencies, and detrimental effects of the cysteamine treatment.

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