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Featured researches published by Vincent Fong.


Nature | 2012

Interaction landscape of membrane - protein complexes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Mohan Babu; James Vlasblom; Shuye Pu; Xinghua Guo; Chris Graham; Björn D. M. Bean; Helen E. Burston; Franco J. Vizeacoumar; Jamie Snider; Sadhna Phanse; Vincent Fong; Yuen Yi C. Tam; Michael Davey; Olha Hnatshak; Navgeet Bajaj; Shamanta Chandran; Thanuja Punna; Constantine Christopolous; Victoria Wong; Analyn Yu; Gouqing Zhong; Joyce Li; Igor Stagljar; Elizabeth Conibear; Andrew Emili; Jack Greenblatt

Macromolecular assemblies involving membrane proteins (MPs) serve vital biological roles and are prime drug targets in a variety of diseases. Large-scale affinity purification studies of soluble-protein complexes have been accomplished for diverse model organisms, but no global characterization of MP-complex membership has been described so far. Here we report a complete survey of 1,590 putative integral, peripheral and lipid-anchored MPs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which were affinity purified in the presence of non-denaturing detergents. The identities of the co-purifying proteins were determined by tandem mass spectrometry and subsequently used to derive a high-confidence physical interaction map encompassing 1,726 membrane protein–protein interactions and 501 putative heteromeric complexes associated with the various cellular membrane systems. Our analysis reveals unexpected physical associations underlying the membrane biology of eukaryotes and delineates the global topological landscape of the membrane interactome.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2008

Comparative Proteomics Profiling of a Phospholamban Mutant Mouse Model of Dilated Cardiomyopathy Reveals Progressive Intracellular Stress Responses

Anthony O. Gramolini; Thomas Kislinger; Rasoul Alikhani-Koopaei; Vincent Fong; Natalie J. Thompson; Ruth Isserlin; Parveen Sharma; Gavin Y. Oudit; Maria G. Trivieri; Ailís Fagan; Anitha Kannan; Hendrik Huedig; George Hess; Sara Arab; Jonathan G. Seidman; Christine E. Seidman; Brendan J. Frey; Marc Perry; Peter H. Backx; Peter Liu; David H. MacLennan; Andrew Emili

Defective mobilization of Ca2+ by cardiomyocytes can lead to cardiac insufficiency, but the causative mechanisms leading to congestive heart failure (HF) remain unclear. In the present study we performed exhaustive global proteomics surveys of cardiac ventricle isolated from a mouse model of cardiomyopathy overexpressing a phospholamban mutant, R9C (PLN-R9C), and exhibiting impaired Ca2+ handling and death at 24 weeks and compared them with normal control littermates. The relative expression patterns of 6190 high confidence proteins were monitored by shotgun tandem mass spectrometry at 8, 16, and 24 weeks of disease progression. Significant differential abundance of 593 proteins was detected. These proteins mapped to select biological pathways such as endoplasmic reticulum stress response, cytoskeletal remodeling, and apoptosis and included known biomarkers of HF (e.g. brain natriuretic peptide/atrial natriuretic factor and angiotensin-converting enzyme) and other indicators of presymptomatic functional impairment. These altered proteomic profiles were concordant with cognate mRNA patterns recorded in parallel using high density mRNA microarrays, and top candidates were validated by RT-PCR and Western blotting. Mapping of our highest ranked proteins against a human diseased explant and to available data sets indicated that many of these proteins could serve as markers of disease. Indeed we showed that several of these proteins are detectable in mouse and human plasma and display differential abundance in the plasma of diseased mice and affected patients. These results offer a systems-wide perspective of the dynamic maladaptions associated with impaired Ca2+ homeostasis that perturb myocyte function and ultimately converge to cause HF.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Constitutively active calcineurin induces cardiac endoplasmic reticulum stress and protects against apoptosis that is mediated by α-crystallin-B

Nicolas Bousette; Shaan Chugh; Vincent Fong; Ruth Isserlin; Kyoung-Han Kim; Allen Volchuk; Peter H. Backx; Peter Liu; Thomas Kislinger; David H. MacLennan; Andrew Emili; Anthony O. Gramolini

Cardiac-specific overexpression of a constitutively active form of calcineurin A (CNA) leads directly to cardiac hypertrophy in the CNA mouse model. Because cardiac hypertrophy is a prominent characteristic of many cardiomyopathies, we deduced that delineating the proteomic profile of ventricular tissue from this model might identify novel, widely applicable therapeutic targets. Proteomic analysis was carried out by subjecting fractionated cardiac samples from CNA mice and their WT littermates to gel-free liquid chromatography linked to shotgun tandem mass spectrometry. We identified 1,918 proteins with high confidence, of which 290 were differentially expressed. Microarray analysis of the same tissue provided us with alterations in the ventricular transcriptome. Because bioinformatic analyses of both the proteome and transcriptome demonstrated the up-regulation of endoplasmic reticulum stress, we validated its occurrence in adult CNA hearts through a series of immunoblots and RT-PCR analyses. Endoplasmic reticulum stress often leads to increased apoptosis, but apoptosis was minimal in CNA hearts, suggesting that activated calcineurin might protect against apoptosis. Indeed, the viability of cultured neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes (NCMs) from CNA mice was higher than WT after serum starvation, an apoptotic trigger. Proteomic data identified α-crystallin B (Cryab) as a potential mediator of this protective effect and we showed that silencing of Cryab via lentivector-mediated transduction of shRNAs in NCMs led to a significant reduction in NCM viability and loss of protection against apoptosis. The identification of Cryab as a downstream effector of calcineurin-induced protection against apoptosis will permit elucidation of its role in cardiac apoptosis and its potential as a therapeutic target.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010

Synthetic Peptide Arrays for Pathway-Level Protein Monitoring by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Johannes A. Hewel; Jian Liu; Kento Onishi; Vincent Fong; Shamanta Chandran; Jonathan B. Olsen; Oxana Pogoutse; Mike Schutkowski; Holger Wenschuh; Dirk F. H. Winkler; Larry Eckler; Peter W. Zandstra; Andrew Emili

Effective methods to detect and quantify functionally linked regulatory proteins in complex biological samples are essential for investigating mammalian signaling pathways. Traditional immunoassays depend on proprietary reagents that are difficult to generate and multiplex, whereas global proteomic profiling can be tedious and can miss low abundance proteins. Here, we report a target-driven liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) strategy for selectively examining the levels of multiple low abundance components of signaling pathways which are refractory to standard shotgun screening procedures and hence appear limited in current MS/MS repositories. Our stepwise approach consists of: (i) synthesizing microscale peptide arrays, including heavy isotope-labeled internal standards, for use as high quality references to (ii) build empirically validated high density LC-MS/MS detection assays with a retention time scheduling system that can be used to (iii) identify and quantify endogenous low abundance protein targets in complex biological mixtures with high accuracy by correlation to a spectral database using new software tools. The method offers a flexible, rapid, and cost-effective means for routine proteomic exploration of biological systems including “label-free” quantification, while minimizing spurious interferences. As proof-of-concept, we have examined the abundance of transcription factors and protein kinases mediating pluripotency and self-renewal in embryonic stem cell populations.


Journal of Proteomics | 2013

ComplexQuant: High-throughput computational pipeline for the global quantitative analysis of endogenous soluble protein complexes using high resolution protein HPLC and precision label-free LC/MS/MS ☆

Cuihong Wan; Jian Liu; Vincent Fong; Andrew Lugowski; Snejana Stoilova; Dylan Bethune-Waddell; Blake Borgeson; Pierre C. Havugimana; Edward M. Marcotte; Andrew Emili

The experimental isolation and characterization of stable multi-protein complexes are essential to understanding the molecular systems biology of a cell. To this end, we have developed a high-throughput proteomic platform for the systematic identification of native protein complexes based on extensive fractionation of soluble protein extracts by multi-bed ion exchange high performance liquid chromatography (IEX-HPLC) combined with exhaustive label-free LC/MS/MS shotgun profiling. To support these studies, we have built a companion data analysis software pipeline, termed ComplexQuant. Proteins present in the hundreds of fractions typically collected per experiment are first identified by exhaustively interrogating MS/MS spectra using multiple database search engines within an integrative probabilistic framework, while accounting for possible post-translation modifications. Protein abundance is then measured across the fractions based on normalized total spectral counts and precursor ion intensities using a dedicated tool, PepQuant. This analysis allows co-complex membership to be inferred based on the similarity of extracted protein co-elution profiles. Each computational step has been optimized for processing large-scale biochemical fractionation datasets, and the reliability of the integrated pipeline has been benchmarked extensively. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: From protein structures to clinical applications.


Clinical Proteomics | 2009

Critical Evaluation of Product Ion Selection and Spectral Correlation Analysis for Biomarker Screening Using Targeted Peptide Multiple Reaction Monitoring

Jian Liu; Johannes A. Hewel; Vincent Fong; Michelle Chan-Shen-Yue; Andrew Emili

IntroductionTandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) has emerged as a cornerstone of proteomic screens aimed at discovering putative protein biomarkers of disease with potential clinical applications. Systematic validation of lead candidates in large numbers of samples from patient cohorts remains an important challenge. One particularly promising high throughout technique is multiple reaction monitoring (MRM), a targeted form of MS/MS by which precise peptide precursor–product ion combinations, or transitions, are selectively tracked as informative probes. Despite recent progress, however, many important computational and statistical issues remain unresolved. These include the selection of an optimal set of transitions so as to achieve sufficiently high specificity and sensitivity when profiling complex biological specimens, and the corresponding generation of a suitable scoring function to reliably confirm tentative molecular identities based on noisy spectra.MethodsIn this study, we investigate various empirical criteria that are helpful to consider when developing and interpreting MRM-style assays based on the similarity between experimental and annotated reference spectra. We also rigorously evaluate and compare the performance of conventional spectral similarity measures, based on only a few pre-selected representative transitions, with a generic scoring metric, termed Tcorr, wherein a selected product ion profile is used to score spectral comparisons.ConclusionsOur analyses demonstrate that Tcorr is potentially more suitable and effective for detecting biomarkers in complex biological mixtures than more traditional spectral library searches.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2014

Discovery of Novel Disease-specific and Membrane-associated Candidate Markers in a Mouse Model of Multiple Sclerosis

Laura F. Dagley; Nathan P. Croft; Ruth Isserlin; Jonathan B. Olsen; Vincent Fong; Andrew Emili; Anthony W. Purcell

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic demyelinating disorder characterized by the infiltration of auto-reactive immune cells from the periphery into the central nervous system resulting in axonal injury and neuronal cell death. Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis represents the best characterized animal model as common clinical, histological, and immunological features are recapitulated. A label-free mass spectrometric proteomics approach was used to detect differences in protein abundance within specific fractions of disease-affected tissues including the soluble lysate derived from the spinal cord and membrane protein-enriched peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Tissues were harvested from actively induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis mice and sham-induced (“vehicle” control) counterparts at the disease peak followed by subsequent analysis by nanoflow liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Relative protein quantitation was performed using both intensity- and fragmentation-based approaches. After statistical evaluation of the data, over 500 and 250 differentially abundant proteins were identified in the spinal cord and peripheral blood mononuclear cell data sets, respectively. More than half of these observations have not previously been linked to the disease. The biological significance of all candidate disease markers has been elucidated through rigorous literature searches, pathway analysis, and validation studies. Results from comprehensive targeted mass spectrometry analyses have confirmed the differential abundance of ∼200 candidate markers (≥twofold dysregulated expression) at a 70% success rate. This study is, to our knowledge, the first to examine the cell-surface proteome of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. These data provide a unique mechanistic insight into the dynamics of peripheral immune cell infiltration into CNS-privileged sites at a molecular level and has identified several candidate markers, which represent promising targets for future multiple sclerosis therapies. The mass spectrometry proteomics data associated with this manuscript have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium with the data set identifier PXD000255.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

Large-Scale Characterization and Analysis of the Murine Cardiac Proteome

Nicolas Bousette; Thomas Kislinger; Vincent Fong; Ruth Isserlin; Johannes A. Hewel; Andrew Emili; Anthony O. Gramolini


Archive | 2008

Use of igfbp-7 in the assessment of heart failure

Ursula-Henrike Wienhues-Thelen; Georg Hess; Hendrik Huedig; Herbert von der Eltz; Andrew Emili; Anthony O. Gramolini; Peter Liu; David H. MacLennan; Vincent Fong; Ruth Isserlin; Thomas Kislinger; Dirk Block


Analytical Chemistry | 2008

Sequential Interval Motif Search: Unrestricted Database Surveys of Global MS/MS Data Sets for Detection of Putative Post-Translational Modifications

Jian Liu; Alexandre Erassov; Patrick Halina; Myra Canete; Nguyen Dinh Vo; Clement Chung; Gerard Cagney; Alexandr Ignatchenko; Vincent Fong; Andrew Emili

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Andrew Emili

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Thomas Kislinger

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Jian Liu

University of Toronto

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Andrew Emili

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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