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Transcriptomic and functional proteomics analyses to unveil the common and unique pathway(s) of neuritogenesis induced by Russell's viper venom nerve growth factor in rat pheochromocytoma neuronal cells.

Taufikul IslamDev MadhubalaRupak MukhopadhyayAshis Kumar Mukherjee
Published in: Expert review of proteomics (2021)
Background: The snake venom nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced signal transduction mechanism has never been explored.Research design and methods: Homology modeling and molecular dynamic studies of the interaction between Russell's viper venom NGF (RVV-NGFa) and mammalian tropomyosin-receptor kinase A (TrkA) was done by computational analysis. Transcriptomic and quantitative tandem mass spectrometry analyses determined the expression of intracellular genes and proteins, respectively, in RVV-NGFa-treated PC-12 neuronal cells. Small synthetic inhibitors of the signal transduction pathways were used to validate the major signaling cascades of neuritogenesis by RVV-NGFa.Results: A comparative computational analysis predicted the binding of RVV-NGFa, mouse 2.5S-NGF (conventional neurotrophin), and Nn-α-elapitoxin-1 (non-conventional neurotrophin) to different domains of the TrkA receptor in PC-12 cells. The transcriptomic and quantitative proteomic analyses in unison showed differential expressions of common and unique genes and intracellular proteins, respectively, in RVV-NGFa-treated cells compared to control (untreated) mouse 2.5S-NGF and Nn-α-elapitoxin-1-treated PC-12 cells. The RVV-NGFa primarily triggered the mitogen-activated protein kinase-1 (MAPK1) signaling pathway for inducing neuritogenesis; however, 36 pathways of neuritogenesis were uniquely expressed in RVV-NGFa-treated PC-12 cells compared to mouse 2.5S NGF or Nn-α-elapitoxin-1 treated cells.Conclusion: The common and unique intracellular signaling pathways of neuritogenesis by classical and non-classical neurotrophins were identified.
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