The proteomes of human parotid and submandibular/sublingual gland salivas collected as the ductal secretions

Paul Denny, Fred K. Hagen, Markus Hardt, Lujian Liao, Weihong Yan, Martha Arellanno, Sara Bassilian, Gurrinder S. Bedi, Pinmannee Boontheung, Daniel Cociorva, Claire M. Delahunty, Irish Denny, Jason Dunsmore, Kym F. Faull, Joyce Gilligan, Mireya Gonzalez-Begne, Fréléric Halgand, Steven C. Hall, Xuemei Han, Bradley HensonJohannes Hewel, Shen Hu, Sherry Jeflrey, Jiang Jiang, Joseph A. Loo, Rachel R. Ogorzalek Loo, Daniel Malamud, James E. Melvin, Olga Miroshnychenko, Mahvash Navazesh, Richard Niles, Sung Kyu Park, Akraporn Prakobphol, Prasanna Ramachandran, Megan Richert, Sarah Robinson, Melissa Sondej, Puneet Souda, Mark A. Sullivan, Jona Takashima, Shawn Than, Jianghua Wang, Julian P. Whitelegge, H. Ewa Witkowska, Lawrence Wolinsky, Yongming Xie, Tao Xu, Weixia Yu, Jimmy Ytterberg, David T. Wong, John R. Yates, Susan J. Fisher

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Saliva is a body fluid with important functions in oral and general health. A consortium of three research groups catalogued the proteins in human saliva collected as the ductal secretions: 1166 identifications-914 in parotid and 917 in submandibular/sublingual saliva-were made. The results showed that a high proportion of proteins that are found in plasma and/or tears are also present in saliva along with unique components. The proteins identified are involved in numerous molecular processes ranging from structural functions to enzymatic/catalytic activities. As expected, the majority mapped to the extracellular and secretory compartments. An immunoblot approach was used to validate the presence in saliva of a subset of the proteins identified by mass spectrometric approaches. These experiments focused on novel constituents and proteins for which the peptide evidence was relatively weak. Ultimately, information derived from the work reported here and related published studies can be used to translate blood-based clinical laboratory tests into a format that utilizes saliva. Additionally, a catalogue of the salivary proteome of healthy individuals allows future analyses of salivary samples from individuals with oral and systemic diseases, with the goal of identifying biomarkers with diagnostic and/or prognostic value for these conditions; another possibility is the discovery of therapeutic targets.

    Original languageEnglish (US)
    Pages (from-to)1994-2006
    Number of pages13
    JournalJournal of Proteome Research
    Volume7
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - May 2008

    Keywords

    • Ductal secretion
    • Human saliva
    • Mass spectrometry
    • Parotid
    • Proteomics
    • Sublingual
    • Submandibular

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Chemistry(all)
    • Biochemistry

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