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The tear film is a thin layer of fluid that covers the ocular surface and is
involved in lubrication and protection of the eye. Little is known about the
protein composition of tear fluid but its deregulation is associated with
disease states, such as diabetic dry eyes. This makes this body fluid an
interestingly candidate for in-depth proteomic analysis.
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In this study, we employ state-of-the-art mass spectrometric identification,
using both a hybrid linear ion trap - Fourier Transform (LTQ-FT) and a linear
ion trap - orbitrap (LTQ-Orbitrap) mass spectrometer, and high confidence
identification by two consecutive stages of peptide fragmentation (MS/MS/MS or
MS3), to characterize the protein content of the tear fluid. Low microliter
amounts of tear fluid samples were either pre-fractionated with 1D SDS-PAGE and
digested in situ with trypsin, or digested in solution. Five times more
proteins were detected after gel electrophoresis compared to in solution
digestion (317 vs. 63 proteins). Ontology classification revealed that 64 of
the identified proteins are proteases or protease inhibitors. Of these, only 24
have previously been described as components of the tear fluid. We also
identified 18 anti-oxidant enzymes, which protect the eye from harmful
consequences of its exposure to oxygen. Only two proteins with this activity
were previously described in the literature.
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Equilibrium between proteases and protease inhibitors, and between oxidative
reactions, is an important feature of the ocular environment. Identification of
a much larger set of proteins participating in these reactions may allow
discovery of molecular markers of disease conditions of the eye.
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This database accompanies the article:
de Souza G.A., Godoy L.M., Mann M., Identification of 491 proteins in the tear
fluid proteome reveals a large number of proteases and protease inhibitors,
Genome Biol. 2006;7(8):R72. Epub Aug 10 (2006)
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