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PXD014128-1

PXD014128 is an original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.

Dataset Summary
TitleHigh fat diet response metaproteomics
DescriptionThis dataset contains proteomic data from mice with high or low weight gain in response to a high fat diet. Both host and microbial proteins are present. In the supplemental, there are also tables and supplementary files that can be used for replicating the bioinformatic analysis. Abstract: Consumption of refined high-fat, low-fiber diets promotes development of obesity and its associated consequences. While genetics play an important role in dictating susceptibility to such obesogenic diets, mice with nearly uniform genetics exhibit marked heterogeneity in their extent of obesity in response to such diets. This suggests non-genetic determinants play a role in diet-induced obesity. Hence, we sought to identify parameters that predict, and/or correlate with, development of obesity in response to an obesogenic diet. We assayed behavior, metabolic parameters, inflammatory markers/cytokines, microbiota composition, and the fecal metaproteome, in a cohort of mice (n=50) prior to, and the 8 weeks following, administration of an obesogenic high-fat low-fiber diet. Neither behavioral testing nor quantitation of inflammatory markers broadly predicted severity of diet-induced obesity. Although, the small subset of mice that exhibited basal elevations in serum IL-6 (n=5) were among the more obese mice in the cohort. While fecal microbiota composition changed markedly in response to the obesogenic diet, it lacked the ability to predict which mice were relative prone or resistant to obesity. In contrast, fecal metaproteome analysis revealed functional and taxonomic differences among the proteins associated with proneness to obesity. Targeted interrogation of microbiota composition data successfully validated the taxonomic differences seen in the metaproteome. While future work will be needed to determine the breadth of applicability of these associations to other cohorts of animals and humans, this study nonetheless highlights the potential power of gut microbial proteins to predict and perhaps impact development of obesity.
HostingRepositoryMassIVE
AnnounceDate2019-07-02
AnnouncementXMLSubmission_2019-07-02_10:10:53.xml
DigitalObjectIdentifier
ReviewLevelNon peer-reviewed dataset
DatasetOriginOriginal dataset
RepositorySupportSupported dataset by repository
PrimarySubmitterRobert Mills
SpeciesList scientific name: Bacteria; common name: eubacteria; NCBI TaxID: 2; scientific name: Mus musculus; common name: house mouse; NCBI TaxID: 10090;
ModificationListTMT6plex; Label:13C(1)2H(3)+Oxidation; Carbamidomethyl
InstrumentOrbitrap Fusion
Dataset History
RevisionDatetimeStatusChangeLog Entry
02019-06-04 14:05:08ID requested
12019-07-02 10:10:54announced
Publication List
no publication
Keyword List
submitter keyword: TMT Proteomics, Metaproteomics, Microbiome, Diet-induced obesity
Contact List
David Gonzalez
contact affiliationUCSD
contact emaildjgonzalez@ucsd.edu
lab head
Robert Mills
contact affiliationUCSD
contact emailrhmills@ucsd.edu
dataset submitter
Full Dataset Link List
MassIVE dataset URI
Dataset FTP location
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