A proteome scale study reveals how plastic surfaces and agitation promote protein aggregation

Archive ouverte

Schvartz, Marion | Saudrais, Florent | Devineau, Stéphanie | Aude, Jean-Christophe | Chédin, Stéphane | Henry, Céline | Millán-Oropeza, Aarón | Perrault, Thomas | Pieri, Laura | Pin, Serge | Boulard, Yves | Brotons, Guillaume | Renault, Jean-Philippe

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Protein aggregation in biotherapeutics can reduce their activity and effectiveness. It may also promote immune reactions responsible for severe adverse effects. The impact of plastic materials on protein destabilization is not totally understood. Here, we propose to deconvolve the effects of material surface, air/liquid interface, and agitation to decipher their respective role in protein destabilization and aggregation. We analyzed the effect of polypropylene, TEFLON, glass and LOBIND surfaces on the stability of purified proteins (bovine serum albumin, hemoglobin and α-synuclein) and on a cell extract composed of 6000 soluble proteins during agitation ( P = 0.1–1.2 W/kg). Proteomic analysis revealed that chaperonins, intrinsically disordered proteins and ribosomes were more sensitive to the combined effects of material surfaces and agitation while small metabolic oligomers could be protected in the same conditions. Protein loss observations coupled to Raman microscopy, dynamic light scattering and proteomic allowed us to propose a mechanistic model of protein destabilization by plastics. Our results suggest that protein loss is not primarily due to the nucleation of small aggregates in solution, but to the destabilization of proteins exposed to material surfaces and their subsequent aggregation at the sheared air/liquid interface, an effect that cannot be prevented by using LOBIND tubes. A guidance can be established on how to minimize these adverse effects. Remove one of the components of this combined stress - material, air (even partially), or agitation - and proteins will be preserved.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Role of the Protein Corona in the Colloidal Behavior of Microplastics

Archive ouverte | Schvartz, Marion | CCSD

International audience. Microparticles of polyethylene and polypropylene are largely found in aquatic environments because they are the most produced and persistent plastic materials. Once in biological media, they ...

The Impact of Virgin and Aged Microstructured Plastics on Proteins: The Case of Hemoglobin Adsorption and Oxygenation

Archive ouverte | Saudrais, Florent | CCSD

International audience. Plastic particles, particularly micro- and nanoparticles, are emerging pollutants due to the ever-growing amount of plastics produced across a wide variety of sectors. When plastic particles ...

From Protein Corona to Colloidal Self-Assembly: The Importance of Protein Size in Protein–Nanoparticle Interactions

Archive ouverte | Marichal, Laurent | CCSD

International audience. Protein adsorption on nanoparticles is an important field of study, particularly with regard to nanomedicine and nanotoxicology. Many factors can influence the composition and structure of th...

Chargement des enrichissements...