Skeletal muscle ‘omics: methods and insights Flashcards

1
Q

why use omic approaches

what is the hierachy of omic methodologies

A
  • Genomics (gene)
  • Transcriptomics (RNA)
  • Proteomics (protein)
  • metabolomics (metabolites)
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2
Q

what is a disadvantage of WB, RT-PCR etc being reductionist approaches?

A
  • permit examination of VERY limited number of molecules
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3
Q

what does omic analyses allow to be assessed?

A

allows expression changes in hundreds of thousands of molecules to be assessed

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4
Q

what is are 2 examples of transcriptomics?

A
  • microarrays
  • RNA sequencing
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5
Q

microarrays to determine gene expression

outline the process for microarrays to determine gene expression

A

1) sample mRNA is prepared using protein extraction and RT-PCR and labelled with fluorescent dye

2) specific probes are generated onto microarray

3) sample is added to microarray

4) Specific gene sequence in sample binds with specific probe only

5) Microarray is scanned and fluorescence from sample is detected (more fluorescence intensity = more gene expression)

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6
Q

Transcriptomics: understanding training in younger and older adults

what is one of the purposes of the muscle extra-cellular matrix

A
  • force transduction (generating forceful contractions)
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7
Q

RNA sequencing

outline the process of RNA sequencing for transcriptomics

A

Extract RNA

Library prep by only selecting poly(A) (the mature RNA) and removing immature RNA,
(Poly(A) only (i.e. mature RNA)

fragment RNA

Add adapters so it adheres to the platform better

Sequence

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8
Q

microarray or RNA sequencing

Compare and contrast the advantages and disadvantages of transcriptomics techniques: microarray and RNA sequencing

A

microarray:
- £300
- stream-lined, validated with few variations
- well established methods
RNA sequencing:
- expensive
- can take weeks-months to even years, so laborious

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9
Q

proteomics

why is proteomics important

A

Genes encode proteins, however,

  • increased gene expression does not necessarily mean increased protein expression
  • Proteins are ultimately the functional units of the cell molecules that regulate metabolism
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10
Q

what are the 3 techniques for proteomics?

A
  • iTRAQ
  • MALDI-TOF
  • 2D-PAGE
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11
Q

2-D Page

outline, in 5 steps the process of the proteomics technique called 2-D page

A
  1. Protein is extracted from sample
  2. Then subjected to 2D-PAGE by:
  • Sample is separated first by charge (pH)
  • Then by molecular mass by passing through a gel
  1. Produces gel with series of spots, with each spot corresponding to a single protein / cluster of structurally similar proteins
  2. density of spots from two samples then compared
  3. spots are cut out and analysed by MS to identify proteins
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12
Q

what is the disadvantage of 2D-PAGE?

A

issues with reproducibility

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13
Q

proteomics - MALDI-TOF

what are 2 advantages of MALDI-TOF

A
  • Allows determination of molecule mass, elemental composition and chemical structure
  • TOF has large mass range to cover whole proteome
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14
Q

proteomics

what does MALDI do?

A

MALDI – fragments sample into small components via UV beam and ionization

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15
Q

outline how MALDI-TOF works in 4 steps

A
  1. put spectroCHIP array into MALDI-TOF cylinder
  2. shoot spectroCHIP with UV light to bombard chip, vaporising and ionising the sample
  3. when shot with UV light, postively charged sample will fly to the negative detector in nanoseconds, with lighter particles reaching there first, and heavier ones getting there later
  4. based on the weight of these protein particles on your analysis software, you can identify based on weight what those proteins are
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16
Q

proteomics - iTRAQ

what does iTRAQ stand for?

A
  • isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation
17
Q

outline how iTRAQ works in 5 steps

A

1) give each sample a unique label and an iTRAQ balancer

2) mix samples into a mixture

3) iTRAQ balancer makes mass all of peptide samples to have the same molecular weight

4) run mixture on a mass spectrometer, which shows all the different samples that you made with peptides at similar peaks due to the differences in balancers added

5) run it through a mass spectrometer again, fragmenting the sample, which removes the iTRAQ balancer, but now all of the peptide samples within the main samples show their actual weights too so you can compare using software analysis

18
Q

what is iTRAQ combined with and what does this permit?

A
  • combined with MADLI-TOF MS or just MS
19
Q

what is a downside of iTRAQ

A
  • compared to other proteomic techniques, you only find a limited number of proteins
20
Q

metabolomics

state what metabolomics measures

A

measures the plethora of small molecules involved in intermediary metabolism (eg: Fatty acids, sterols, amino acids, sugars, hormones, cytokines)

21
Q

define a metabolite

A

any organic molecule detectable in the body with a molecular weight (MW) of < 1500 Da

22
Q

what are 2 ways you can do metabolomics

A
  • Nuclear magnetic Resonance
  • Mass Spectrometry
23
Q

what is 1 advantage and 2 disadvantage of Mass spectrometry for metabolomics?

A

advantage:
- highly sensitive so can detect lower abundance metabolites
disadvantages:
- can be expensive
- requires lots of expertise to run

24
Q

what is 1 advantage and 1 disadvantage of H-NMR?

A

advantage:
- more affordable than mass spectrometry

disadvantage:
- not as sensitive as mass spectrometry, so can’t detect lower abundance metabolites

25
Q

metabolomics - ageing muscle

what are some age related metabolomic profile signatures that can give us an idea of what is happening at a phenotypic level

A

Age-related signatures:

  • Androgens
  • Lipids
  • Amino acids
26
Q

what 5 things is metabolomics suggesting looking into regarding muscle deconditioning

A
  • anabolic resistance
  • degradation of neuromuscular junction
  • insulin resistance
  • changes in substrate utilisation
  • mitochondrial degradation
27
Q

metabolomics - muscle deconditioning

what is anabolic resistance/ anabolic blunting

A

display of lower ability to conditioning of muscle