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Dive into the research topics where Susantha Mohottalage is active.

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Featured researches published by Susantha Mohottalage.


Toxicological Sciences | 2013

Mapping Acute Systemic Effects of Inhaled Particulate Matter and Ozone: Multiorgan Gene Expression and Glucocorticoid Activity

Errol M. Thomson; Djordje Vladisavljevic; Susantha Mohottalage; Prem Kumarathasan; Renaud Vincent

Recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated associations between air pollution and adverse effects that extend beyond respiratory and cardiovascular disease, including low birth weight, appendicitis, stroke, and neurological/neurobehavioural outcomes (e.g., neurodegenerative disease, cognitive decline, depression, and suicide). To gain insight into mechanisms underlying such effects, we mapped gene profiles in the lungs, heart, liver, kidney, spleen, cerebral hemisphere, and pituitary of male Fischer-344 rats immediately and 24h after a 4-h exposure by inhalation to particulate matter (0, 5, and 50mg/m3 EHC-93 urban particles) and ozone (0, 0.4, and 0.8 ppm). Pollutant exposure provoked differential expression of genes involved in a number of pathways, including antioxidant response, xenobiotic metabolism, inflammatory signalling, and endothelial dysfunction. The mRNA profiles, while exhibiting some interorgan and pollutant-specific differences, were remarkably similar across organs for a set of genes, including increased expression of redox/glucocorticoid-sensitive genes and decreased expression of inflammatory genes, suggesting a possible hormonal effect. Pollutant exposure increased plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone and the glucocorticoid corticosterone, confirming activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and there was a corresponding increase in markers of glucocorticoid activity. Although effects were transient and presumably represent an adaptive response to acute exposure in these healthy animals, chronic activation and inappropriate regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis are associated with adverse neurobehavioral, metabolic, immune, developmental, and cardiovascular effects. The experimental data are consistent with epidemiological associations of air pollutants with extrapulmonary health outcomes and suggest a mechanism through which such health effects may be induced.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2013

Current Status and Future Perspectives of Mass Spectrometry Imaging

Surendra Nimesh; Susantha Mohottalage; Renaud Vincent; Prem Kumarathasan

Mass spectrometry imaging is employed for mapping proteins, lipids and metabolites in biological tissues in a morphological context. Although initially developed as a tool for biomarker discovery by imaging the distribution of protein/peptide in tissue sections, the high sensitivity and molecular specificity of this technique have enabled its application to biomolecules, other than proteins, even in cells, latent finger prints and whole organisms. Relatively simple, with no requirement for labelling, homogenization, extraction or reconstitution, the technique has found a variety of applications in molecular biology, pathology, pharmacology and toxicology. By discriminating the spatial distribution of biomolecules in serial sections of tissues, biomarkers of lesions and the biological responses to stressors or diseases can be better understood in the context of structure and function. In this review, we have discussed the advances in the different aspects of mass spectrometry imaging processes, application towards different disciplines and relevance to the field of toxicology.


Journal of Proteomics | 2014

Applicability of a high-throughput shotgun plasma protein screening approach in understanding maternal biological pathways relevant to infant birth weight outcome.

Premkumari Kumarathasan; Renaud Vincent; Dharani Das; Susantha Mohottalage; Erica Blais; K. Blank; Subramanian Karthikeyan; N.Q. Vuong; Tye E. Arbuckle; W.D. Fraser

UNLABELLED There are reports linking maternal nutritional status, smoking and environmental chemical exposures to adverse pregnancy outcomes. However, biological bases for association between some of these factors and birth outcomes are yet to be established. The objective of this preliminary work is to test the capability of a new high-throughput shotgun plasma proteomic screening in identifying maternal changes relevant to pregnancy outcome. A subset of third trimester plasma samples (N=12) associated with normal and low-birth weight infants were fractionated, tryptic-digested and analyzed for global proteomic changes using a MALDI-TOF-TOF-MS methodology. Mass spectral data were mined for candidate biomarkers using bioinformatic and statistical tools. Maternal plasma profiles of cytokines (e.g. IL8, TNF-α), chemokines (e.g. MCP-1) and cardiovascular endpoints (e.g. ET-1, MMP-9) were analyzed by a targeted approach using multiplex protein array and HPLC-Fluorescence methods. Target and global plasma proteomic markers were used to identify protein interaction networks and maternal biological pathways relevant to low infant birth weight. Our results exhibited the potential to discriminate specific maternal physiologies relevant to risk of adverse birth outcomes. This proteomic approach can be valuable in understanding the impacts of maternal factors such as environmental contaminant exposures and nutrition on birth outcomes in future work. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE We demonstrate here the fitness of mass spectrometry-based shot-gun proteomics for surveillance of biological changes in mothers, and for adverse pathway analysis in combination with target biomarker information. This approach has potential for enabling early detection of mothers at risk for low infant birth weight and preterm birth, and thus early intervention for mitigation and prevention of adverse pregnancy outcomes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Can Proteomics Fill the Gap Between Genomics and Phenotypes?


Journal of Proteomics | 2016

Proteomic changes in human lung epithelial cells (A549) in response to carbon black and titanium dioxide exposures.

Ngoc Q. Vuong; Patrick Goegan; Susantha Mohottalage; Dalibor Breznan; Marianne Ariganello; Andrew Williams; Fred Elisma; Subramanian Karthikeyan; Renaud Vincent; Premkumari Kumarathasan

This study combined cytotoxicity assays with proteomic analysis to characterize the unique biological responses of the A549 human lung epithelial cell line to two physicochemically distinct respirable particles titanium dioxide (TiO2) and carbon black (CB). Cellular LDH, ATP, BrdU incorporation and resazurin reduction indicated that CB was more potent than TiO2. Proteomic analysis was done using 2D-GE and MALDI-TOF-TOF-MS. Proteomic changes reflected common and particle-specific responses. Particle-specific proteomic responses were associated with cell death (necrosis and apoptosis), viability and proliferation pathways. Our results suggested that these pathways were consistent with the cytotoxicity data. For instance, increased expressions of anti-proliferative proteins LMNA and PA2G4 were in agreement with the decreased BrdU incorporation in A549 cells after exposure to CB. Similarly, increased expression of HSPA5 that is associated with ATPase activity was consistent with decreased cellular ATP levels in these cells. These findings reveal that proteomic changes can explain the cellular cytotoxicity characteristics of the particles. In essence, our results demonstrate that the in vitro toxicoproteomic approach is a promising tool to gain insight into molecular mechanisms underlying particle exposure-specific cytotoxicity. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE In this study we have shown that toxicoproteomics is a sensitive and informative method to resolve the toxicity characteristics of particles with different physicochemical properties. This approach can be useful in the investigation of molecular mechanisms underpinning cellular cytotoxic responses elicited by particle exposures. Thus, the toxicoproteomic approach can be valuable in assessing the risk associated with particle exposures in vitro.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2007

Proteomic investigation of 1,6-dimethoxyhexane testicular toxicity

Guillaume Pelletier; Sheila Masson; Yuan-Ling Wang; Michael G. Wade; Susantha Mohottalage; Premkumari Kumarathasan; Renaud Vincent; Raymond Poon; Ih Chu

The aliphatic ether 1,6-dimethoxyhexane (DMH) was previously identified as a testicular toxicant. Testis protein extracts from control and DMH-treated rats were subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis for comparison of protein expression profiles. MALDI-ToF peptide mass fingerprinting of differentially expressed proteins resulted in the conclusive identification of heat shock-related 70kDa protein 2 (HSP70.2), 60kDa heat shock protein, mitochondrial precursor (HSP60) and protein disulfide isomerase A3 precursor (ERp60). The potential involvement of these proteins in chemically induced perturbation of spermatogenesis and their utility as biomarkers of testicular toxicity are discussed in light of the knowledge currently available from the literature.


Data in Brief | 2016

Human lung epithelial cell A549 proteome data after treatment with titanium dioxide and carbon black

Ngoc Q. Vuong; Patrick Goegan; Susantha Mohottalage; Dalibor Breznan; Marianne Ariganello; Andrew Williams; Fred Elisma; Subramanian Karthikeyan; Renaud Vincent; Premkumari Kumarathasan

Here, we have described the dataset relevant to the A549 cellular proteome changes after exposure to either titanium dioxide or carbon black particles as compared to the non-exposed controls, “Proteomic changes in human lung epithelial cells (A549) in response to carbon black and titanium dioxide exposures” (Vuong et al., 2016) [1]. Detailed methodologies on the separation of cellular proteins by 2D-GE and the subsequent mass spectrometry analyses using MALDI-TOF-TOF-MS are documented. Particle exposure-specific protein expression changes were measured via 2D-GE spot volume analysis. Protein identification was done by querying mass spectrometry data against SwissProt and RefSeq protein databases using Mascot search engine. Two-way ANOVA analysis data provided information on statistically significant A549 protein expression changes associated with particle exposures.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2009

Expression and characterization of Pen b 26 allergen of Penicillium brevicompactum in Escherichia coli

M. Serdal Sevinc; Veena Kumar; Makonnen Abebe; Susantha Mohottalage; Premkumari Kumarathasan; Renaud Vincent; Hari M. Vijay

Pen b 26 is one of the allergens produced by Penicillium brevicompactum which is one of the most prevalent in door airborne fungi and a major source of respiratory problems, including asthma. Pen b 26 wa scloned and expressed as an N-terminal as well as a C-terminal His6 tagged fusion protein in Escherichia coli. This allergen was purified by immobilized Ni2+-affinity chromatography. The purified Pen b 26 was characterized by immunological, biochemical and biophysical methods. C-His6 tagged Pen b 26 produced several fold greater yield than N-His6 tagged Pen b 26. The affinity of C-His6 tagged Pen b 26 for the specific antibody was also 2.75 times higher than N-His6 tagged Pen b 26


Analytical Biochemistry | 2005

An optimized protein in-gel digest method for reliable proteome characterization by MALDI-TOF-MS analysis.

Premkumari Kumarathasan; Susantha Mohottalage; Patrick Goegan; Renaud Vincent


Toxicology Letters | 2009

Contribution of methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls and organochlorine pesticides to the toxicity of a contaminant mixture based on Canadian Arctic population blood profiles

Guillaume Pelletier; Sheila Masson; Mike J. Wade; Jamie Nakai; Ramona Alwis; Susantha Mohottalage; Premkumari Kumarathasan; Paleah Black; Wayne J. Bowers; Ih Chu; Renaud Vincent


Journal of AOAC International | 2009

Assessment of suitability of magnetic beads for purification of rat plasma in proteomic analyses by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight MS.

Susantha Mohottalage; Renaud Vincent; Prem Kumarathasan

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Prem Kumarathasan

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

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