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Chemistry and Biology of Aroma and Taste
Dynamic Proteome Alteration and Functional Modulation of Human Saliva Induced by Dietary Chemosensory Stimuli Matthias Bader, Andreas Dunkel, Mareike Wenning, Bernd Kohler, Guillaume Medard, Estela del Castillo, Amin Gholami, Bernhard Kuster, Siegfried Scherer, and Thomas Hofmann J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b02092 • Publication Date (Web): 22 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 23, 2018
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Dynamic Proteome Alteration and Functional Modulation of
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Human Saliva Induced by Dietary Chemosensory Stimuli
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Matthias Bader1, Andreas Dunkel1, Mareike Wenning2, Bernd Kohler2, Guillaume
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Medard3, Estela del Castillo3, Amin Gholami3, Bernhard Kuster3, Siegfried Scherer2,4,
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and Thomas Hofmann1,2,5*
7 1
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Chair of Food Chemistry and Molecular Sensory Science, Technische Universität
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München, Lise-Meitner Str. 34, D-85354 Freising, Germany, 2
10
ZIEL Institute for Food and Health, Technische Universität München, D-85350
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Freising, Germany, 3
12
Chair of Proteomics and Bioanalytics, Technische Universität München, Emil-
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Erlenmeyer-Forum 5, D-85354 Freising, Germany, 4
14
Chair of Microbial Ecology, Department of Biosciences, WZW, Technische
15
Universität München, 85354 Freising, Germany, 5
16
Leibniz-Institute for Food Systems Biology at the Technical University of Munich,
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Lise-Meitner Str. 34, D-85354 Freising, Germany.
18 19 20 21
*
22
PHONE
+49-8161/71-2902
23
FAX
+49-8161/71-2949
24
E-MAIL
[email protected] To whom correspondence should be addressed
25
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ABSTRACT
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Saliva flow measurements and SDS-PAGE separation of human whole saliva freshly
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collected after oral stimulation with citric acid (sour), aspartame (sweet), iso-α-acids
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(bitter), mono sodium L-glutamate (umami), NaCl (salty), 6-gingerol (pungent),
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hydroxy-α-sanshool (tingling), and hydroxy-β-sanshool (numbing), followed by tryptic
31
digestion, nano-HPLC-MS/MS, and label-free protein quantitation demonstrated a
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stimulus- and time-dependent influence of the dietary chemosensates on salivation
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and the salivary proteome composition. Gene ontology enrichment analysis showed
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evidence for stimulus-induced alterations of the saliva proteome to boot an efficient
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molecular defense network of the oral cavity, e.g. 6-gingerol increased salivary
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lactoperoxidase activity, catalyzing the oxidation of thiocyanate to produce the
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antimicrobial and antifungal hypothiocyanate, from 0.37±0.02 to 0.91±0.05 mU/mL 45
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sec after stimulation. In comparison, oral citric acid stimulation induced an increase
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of
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antimicrobial hypochloride in saliva, from 0.24±0.04 to 0.70±0.1 mU/mL as well as an
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increase of salivary levels of lysozyme, exhibiting antimicrobial activity on Gram-
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positive bacteria, from 6.0 – 10 to 100 – 150 µg/mL. Finally, microbial growth
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experiments clearly demonstrated for the first time that the increase of the salivary
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lysozyme abundance upon oral citric acid stimulation translates into an enhanced
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biological function, that is an almost complete growth inhibition of the two lysozyme-
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sensitive Gram-positive bacteria tested.
47 48
Key words: saliva, taste, saliva enzymes, proteomics, lysozyme
myeloperoxidase activity, catalyzing the chloride oxidation to generate
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INTRODUCTION
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Human saliva consists of a heterogeneous aqueous mixture of electrolytes, small
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organic molecules, oligopeptides and proteins, desquamated mucosal and immune
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cells, oral microorganisms, as well as food debris 1, 2. The quantitative composition of
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the secretions of the major submandibular, sublingual and parotid glands as well as
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the multiple minor salivary glands shows considerable variations depending on the
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type of salivary stimulation and is affected by age, gender, day time, health status,
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diet, and the use of pharmacologicals, respectively
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developments in standardizing saliva sample collection and handling procedures as
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well as in cutting-edge proteomics technologies 3-5, a total of 1.166 proteins has been
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reported in whole human saliva
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saliva secretions 3, 15, respectively. Very recently, mass-spectrometry-based mapping
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of the human proteome revealed the existence of more than 2000
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even more than 7400 proteins in saliva
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of human saliva.
6-14
, glandular parotid
1,
2
. Enabled by recent
3, 6, 14, 15
and submandibular
16
, 3700
17
and
18
, thus confirming the enormous complexity
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Saliva constituents play an important role in acquired pellicle formation, which
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is a thin layer of several calcium hydroxide-binding salivary proteins such as, e.g.
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mucins, on tooth surfaces19-21. The acquired pellicle has a crucial function in crystal
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growth homeostasis of the teeth, in protection of the teeth from acid-induced
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demineralization processes2, and in bacterial adhesion and colonization on tooth
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surfaces22, 23. Moreover, saliva has been shown to play an important role in physico-
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chemical and immune defense of the oral mucosal structure via both direct
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antimicrobial action and agglutination or surface exclusion of microbes20, 21.
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Next to supporting food bolus formation and the swallowing process by
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lubrication, saliva supports the maintenance of the structures of taste-sensing cells
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and the fine-tuning of the gustatory system1,
22, 24-27
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composition of saliva seem to affect taste sensitivity during the initial processes of
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taste stimulation. First, chemosensory stimuli must pass through the salivary fluid
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layer to reach the taste receptor sites, and this may include solubilisation and
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chemical interactions of the tastants with salivary components. Some salivary
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constituents are known to chemically interact with taste molecules, e.g. histatins and
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some proline-rich proteins (PRPs) have been shown to complex and precipitate
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astringent tasting plant polyphenols27-31, thus diminishing the aversive orosensation
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induced by these phytochemicals and combating gastrointestinal irritation by tannin-
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rich food at a very early stage of food ingestion27, 28, 32. The major salivary enzyme α-
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amylase induces early polysaccharide digestion in the mouth, e.g. translating into an
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increased saltiness perception in starch-based food products33. Furthermore, lipases
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released from the von Ebner glands and their ability to generate free fatty acids from
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dietary triglycerides to activate fatty acid responsive G-protein coupled receptors in
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taste buds has been correlated to orosensory fat sensitivity34-38. Finally, the perceived
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intensity of sour taste stimuli is modulated by the buffering action of salivary
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bicarbonate39, 40, e.g. electrophysiological studies revealed decreased oral responses
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to hydrochloric acid in rodents when the tongue was conditioned with saliva and
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NaHCO3 when compared to water and NaCl, respectively41.
. Changes in the quantity and
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Moreover, the salivary proteome has been proposed to be an indicator of taste
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disorders, e.g. taste-impaired patients show a significantly decreased abundance of
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Zn-alpha-2 glycoprotein, prolactin-inducible protein, cystatin SN, as well as carbonic
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anhydrase VI in whole saliva42. The latter, carbonic anhydrase VI, reversibly
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catalyzing the conversion of carbon dioxide to hydrogen carbonate and free protons,
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has been related to taste perception due to its proposed implication in the paracrine
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modulation of taste function and taste receptor cell apoptosis43, 44. ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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The rather dynamic changes in saliva composition raised the question as to
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whether dietary taste stimuli themselves are able to induce changes in the
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abundance of selected saliva proteins. 2D-Electrophoresis and mass spectrometric
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analysis of saliva samples collected from volunteers after stimulation with taste
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compounds such as, e.g. glucose, mono sodium L-glutamate, and calcium nitrate,
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respectively, revealed a stimulus-specific modulation of the abundance of some
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saliva proteins including annexin A1 and calgranulin A
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with a complex ginger extract induced elevated levels of the lung and nasal
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epithelium carcinoma-associated protein 2 (SPLUNC2), zinc-alpha-2-glycoproteins
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(Zn-alpha-GP), and carbonic anhydrase VI (CAVI)47.
45, 46
, while oral stimulation
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To gain a more systematic understanding of the dynamic changes of the
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salivary proteome and function of the oral defense system in response to individual
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dietary chemosensory stimuli, the objectives of the present study were to
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quantitatively measure saliva flow induced by dietary taste (sweet, sour, salty,
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umami, bitter) and trigeminal stimuli (pungent, tingling, numbing), to investigate the
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time-resolved changes in the whole salivary proteome by means of a label-free,
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quantitative nano-LC-MS/MS approach, and to investigate whether and, if so, how
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such proteome alterations translate into a functional modulation of saliva.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Chemicals. The following materials were obtained commercially: Coomassie
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Plus (Bradford) Assay Kit (Thermo Fischer Scientific, Rockford, IL, USA);
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SIGMAFAST™ protease inhibitor, 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT), iodoacetamide (IAA),
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colloidal coomassie blue, formic acid (FA), acetic acid, SIGMAFAST™ protease
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inhibitor, triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB), lysozyme (recombinant, expressed
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in rice), myeloperoxidase (Sigma, Steinheim, Germany); acetone, methanol (MeOH),
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ethanol (EtOH) (VWR International, Darmstadt, Germany); trypsin (Promega,
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Fitchburg, WI, USA); acetonitrile (ACN, Rathburn Chemicals, Walkerburn, UK);
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precision plus unstained standards (Biorad, Munich, Germany); 4x NuPAGE® LDS
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Sample Buffer, NuPAGE® MOPS SDS Running Buffer (Invitrogen, Darmstadt,
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Germany).
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For sensory analysis, the following dietary taste compounds were used:
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aspartame, citric acid, 6-gingerol, sodium chloride (Sigma, Steinheim, Germany),
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mono sodium L-glutamate (MSG) (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), hop iso-α-extract
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(Hallertauer Hopfenveredelungsgesellschaft mbH, Mainburg, Germany). Hydroxy-α-
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sanshool and hydroxy-β-sanshool (purity >98%, each) were obtained from
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Zanthoxylum piperitum as reported recently48.
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Human Saliva Experiments. Eleven healthy volunteers (6 male and 5 female,
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ages 24 – 31), giving informed written consent to the experimental plan, were
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recruited from the Technische Universität München, Germany, without any exclusion
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parameters besides being in good health, non-smoking, and not under medication.
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The saliva collection procedure and protocols for the oral stimulation experiments
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were approved by the ethics committee of the Technical University of Munich. The
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methods were carried out in accordance with the relevant guidelines and regulations.
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The individuals were asked to brush their teeth and rinse their mouth with water (100
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mL) after breakfast and, with the exception of water, not to consume any food
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products and smoking articles, respectively, for 2 h prior to the experiment.
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Saliva Flow Measurement. Following a literature procedure47 with some
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modifications, non-stimulated and stimulated whole saliva samples of eight subjects
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(4 male, 4 female) were collected in a sensory room at 23°C as follows: to collect
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non-stimulated saliva (control), the volunteers were asked to rinse their oral cavity ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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with water (8 mL) for 60 s and, then, to spit out. After waiting for 60 s and swallowing,
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an aliquot (2 mL) of water was taken into the mouth and, after performing chewing
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motions for 30 s, the subjects were asked to expectorate in pre-weighed petri dishes
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(pre-stimulus sample, t0). For the sampling of stimulated saliva, the subjects were
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asked to rinse their mouth with water (8 mL) and, then, to spit out. After waiting for 60
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s and swallowing, an aliquot (2 mL) of water (control) or an aqueous stimulus solution
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of citric acid (stimulus S1; 156 mmol/L), aspartame (stimulus S2; 3.4 mmol/L), iso-α-
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acids (stimulus S3; 0.3 mmol/L), mono sodium L-glutamate (stimulus S4; 30 mmol/L),
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sodium chloride (stimulus S5; 513 mmol/L), 6-gingerol (stimulus S6; 1.7 mmol/L),
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hydroxy-α-sanshool (stimulus S7; 4 mmol/L), and hydroxy-β-sanshool (stimulus S8; 4
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mmol/L), respectively, was taken up in the mouth and, after performing chewing
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motions for 15 s, the subjects were asked to expectorate in pre-weighed petri dishes
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(stimulus sample t15). Thereafter, the subjects were asked not to swallow and to take
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a sample of bottled water (2 mL) into the mouth and to chew for 30 s and then to
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expectorate again (post-stimulus sample t45). Without swallowing in between, the
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later part of this experiment was repeated once to afford a second post-stimulus
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sample (t75). To minimize protease-induced artifact formation, SIGMAFAST™
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protease inhibitor (1 µL/mL saliva) was added immediately after sample collection.
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The corresponding samples (t0-t75) collected for each stimulus from all eight different
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subjects at three independent days were pooled and stored at -20°C until use. The
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amount of saliva was calculated from the weight difference of the expectorated
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saliva/water mixture and the aliquot (2 g) of the aqueous stimulus solution used to
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collect the stimulus sample and the aliquot (2 g) of water used to obtain the pre-
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stimulus sample (t0), the stimulus sample (t15), as well as the post-stimulus samples
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(t45, t75). Saliva samples were divided into 2.0 mL aliquots and stored at -80°C until
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were collected in additional sampling sessions as described above. For peroxidase
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related assays, the saliva of 4 subjects (4 male, 4 female), for quantitation of
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lysozyme 11 subjects (6 male, 5 female) and for microbial growth experiments saliva
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of 6 subjects (3 male, 3 female) were collected.
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Quantitation of Salivary Protein Content. The protein concentration in
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pooled saliva samples was determined by using the Coomassie (Bradford) Assay Kit
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following the supplier´s instructions (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Rockford, IL, USA).
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After centrifugation (12’000 rpm, 4°C, 10 min) of the saliva samples, aliquots (5 µL) of
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the supernatant were mixed with the Bradford reagent solution (250 µL) and, after 10
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min of incubation at room temperature, were photometrically analyzed at 595 nm with
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a reference wavelength of 690 nm. The values recorded at the measurement
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wavelength were divided by those received at the reference wavelength. A standard
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curve, recorded by plotting the absorbance measured for standard solutions of
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bovine serum albumin (0, 25, 125, 250, 500, 1000, 1500 and 2000 µg/mL) against
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the quantity of protein, showed excellent linearity (y = 0.0005x + 0.0725; R2 = 0.9933)
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within the range of 0-1000 µg/mL protein.
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Protein Clean-Up and Electrophoresis. Aliquots of saliva samples (350 µg
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protein) were mixed with ice-cold acetone in a 1:9 ratio and incubated for 90 min at -
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20°C, followed by centrifugation (4’500 rpm, 4°C, 10 min). After separating the
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supernatant, the protein pellets were washed twice with ice-cold acetone (200 µL).
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The acetone was removed under a stream of nitrogen, the protein pellets were re-
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suspended in 4× NuPAGE® LDS buffer (65 µL) containing 50 mM DTT and, after
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incubation at 95°C for 10 min, the sample was treated with IAA (550 mM, 5 µL) for 30
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min in the dark. The reduced and alkylated samples were stored at -20°C until further
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use.
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Portions (150 µg) of the pre-treated protein pellet (350 µg) isolated from saliva
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samples (t0, t15, t45, t75) were loaded on a 4-12% NuPAGE® gel (Invitrogen,
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Darmstadt, Germany) in a XCell Sure Lock™ electrophoresis cell (Invitrogen,
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Darmstadt, Germany) operated at 200V for 45 min. To determine the molecular
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weight of the salivary proteins, precision plus unstained standards (Bio-Rad,
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München, Germany) were used as references. The protein bands were fixed by
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slowly shaking the gels in 40% aqueous MeOH containing 2% acetic acid for 60 min.
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Thereafter, the fixing solution was removed and the protein bands were stained by
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keeping the gels in a solution (20 mL) containing 16% colloidal coomassie, 64%
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ELGA water (ELGA Labwater, Celle, Germany), and 20% MeOH with agitation for 2
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h at room temperature. After partial de-staining of the gel by washing with 5% acetic
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acid in 25% MeOH, followed by washing in 25% EtOH, the gel was kept in 1% acetic
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acid until use for in-gel digestion.
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In-Gel Digestion and Nano-LC-MS/MS. Prior to digestion, twelve proteins
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bands from each gel were manually excised to accommodate the whole range of
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molecular weight using a scalpel and subjected to tryptic in-gel digestion following
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standard procedures. The gel bands were de-stained twice with 5 mM TEAB in 50%
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EtOH at 55°C, dehydrated with EtOH, and washed with 5 mM TEAB. After additional
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dehydration with EtOH, trypsin (250 ng) in 5 mM TEAB digestion buffer were added
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at 4°C and then incubated at 37°C for 4 h. Digestion was stopped by the addition of
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5% aqueous formic acid, the peptides were extracted with 1% aqueous formic acid
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(20 µL, 2 times), followed by 0.1% formic acid in 60% acetonitrile (20 µL). At the end,
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50 µL of acetonitrile were added. The peptides were then dried in a Univapo 150
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ECH vacuum concentrator (Uniequip, Planegg, Germany), re-suspended in 0.1%
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aqueous formic acid (20 µL), followed by nano-LC-MS/MS analysis on an amaZon
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ETD mass spectrometer (Bruker Daltonik, Bremen, Germany) coupled to a nanoLCACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Ultra 1D+ (Eksigent, Dublin, CA). Peptides were delivered to a 20 mm x 100 µm
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ReproSil-PUR C18-AQ, 5 µm, trap column (Dr. Maisch, Ammerbuch, Germany) at a
230
flow rate of 5 µL/min in 100% buffer A (0.1% FA in HPLC grade water). After 10
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minutes, the flow rate was reduced to 300 nL/min, and the peptides were transferred
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to a 20 cm x 75 µm ReproSil-PUR C18-AQ, 3 µm, analytical column (Dr. Maisch).
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Separation was performed within 110 min using the following gradient: 2 to 10% B
234
(0.1% FA in ACN) in 2 min, ramp to 35% B over 98 min followed by 8 minutes at 80%
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B and 2 minutes to re-equilibrate at 2% B. Peptides eluted from the column were
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sprayed via emitter tips (PicoTip, New Objective, MA) using a nano-electrospray ion
237
source (Bruker Daltonik, Bremen, Germany). Intact masses of eluting peptides were
238
determined in enhanced resolution scan mode and the ten most intense peaks were
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selected for further fragmentation by collision-induced dissociation (CID) and
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acquisition of fragment spectra in ultra scan mode. Singly charged ions as well as
241
ions with unknown charge state were discarded. After MS analyses, raw tandem
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mass spectra were converted into Mascot generic file format (mgf) by using Bruker
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Compass DataAnalysis Software 4.0 (Bruker Daltonik, Bremen, Germany). Protein
244
identification was performed using the Mascot search engine version 2.3.01 (Matrix
245
Science, London, UK) with carbamidomethyl cysteine, oxidized methionine,
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phosphorylation of serine, threonine and tyrosine and pyro-Glu/Gln N-termini as
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variable modifications. Trypsin was specified as the proteolytic enzyme and up to two
248
missed cleavages were allowed. The mass tolerance of the precursor ion was set to
249
0.3 Da and that of fragment ions was set to 0.5 Da. MS/MS spectra were searched
250
against a decoyed human IPI database (ipi.HUMAN.v3.58.fasta, containing 79794
251
entries). Protein identification from individual search engine results were combined
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using probabilistic protein identification algorithms implemented in Scaffold software
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3.0 (Proteome Software, Portland, OR). Proteins having at least two independent ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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peptide identifications (probability > 0.95) were considered to be present in the
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sample.
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Label-Free Protein Quantitation and Statistical Analysis. Proteins, for which
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at least two suitable peptides could be reliably identified and at least four spectral
258
counts for at least one biological replicate in a group could be detected, were
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considered for protein quantification in non-stimulated (t0) and stimulated saliva
260
samples (t15 – t75). Protein abundances were estimated using normalized spectral
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abundance factor (NSAF) values calculated from the spectral counts of each
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individual identified protein49. Briefly, in order to account for the fact that the larger
263
proteins tend to contribute more peptides or spectra, spectral counts were divided by
264
protein length to provide a spectral abundance factor (SAF). SAF values were then
265
normalized against the sum of all SAF values in the corresponding run, allowing the
266
comparison of protein levels across different runs. The NSAF dataset was imported
267
into the R programming environment for statistical computing50 and the "Power Law
268
Global Error Model" was fitted. It has been shown that the use of PLGEM-based
269
standard deviations to calculate signal-to-noise (STN) ratios in a NSAF dataset
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improves determination of protein expression changes since it is more conservative
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with proteins of low abundance than proteins with high abundance. The null
272
hypothesis was accepted or rejected on the basis of p-values at a specified
273
significance level. For multiple testing adjustments, the false discover rate was
274
calculated using the algorithm of Benjamini and Hochberg51. With appropriate
275
multiple testing adjustment to control the false discovery rate at 5%, p-values allowed
276
to identify differentially expressed proteins. The good fit of the model to the NSAF
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data and the relevant algorithmic details of the PLGEM method are reported earlier52,
278
53
.
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Gene-Ontology Term Enrichment Analysis. Uniprot IDs of proteins showing
280
significantly different expression to control were converted to Entrez GeneID´s using
281
the Uniprot ID mapping tool (http://www.uniprot.org/uploadlists/), the background
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gene set containing all proteins (2564 proteins) detected in human saliva was
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obtained from ProteomicsDB (https://www.proteomicsdb.org/). GO term enrichment
284
was calculated using the over-representation test implemented in the clusterProfiler
285
package (version 3.6.0) within the R programming environment54,
286
following parameters: org.Hs.eg.db (version 3.5.0)56 as organism database,
287
“biological process” as subontology, p-value cut-off of 0.01, p-value adjustment
288
method by Benjamini and Hochberg51, three as minimal size of genes annotated by
289
Ontology term for testing.
290
From the enrichment results, 50 GO-terms with the lowest adjusted p-values per
291
stimulus were selected and filtered for offsprings of GO:0050896 (response to
292
stimulus) using the GOBPOFFSPRING function of the R package GO.db (version
293
3.5.0)57. The list of 44 remaining GO-terms was analyzed for semantic similarities by
294
application of functions included in the GOSemSim package (version 2.4.0)58 and
295
subsequently clustered using the Ward.D2 clustering method within R. Visualization
296
of p-values for individual stimuli and GO-terms grouped by function based on
297
semantic similarity was performed by means of the R-packages ggplot2 (version
298
2.2.1)59 and dendextend (version 1.6.0)60. For assignment of individual proteins to the
299
antimicrobial activity of citric acid induced saliva, proteins from the respective dataset
300
that are annotated for the GO terms GO:0051707 (response to other organism),
301
GO:0009617 (response to bacterium), GO:0043207 (response to external biotic
302
stimulus), GO:0019730 (antimicrobial humoral response), GO:0042742 (defense
303
response to bacterium), or GO:0051873 (killing by host of symbiont cells) were
304
extracted
yielding
22
proteins,
namely
ANXA3_HUMAN,
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based on the
CAP7_HUMAN,
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BPIA1_HUMAN, BPIB1_HUMAN, CAMP_HUMAN, CD14_HUMAN, CATG_HUMAN,
306
ELNE_HUMAN, ENOA_HUMAN, FIBB_HUMAN, G3P_HUMAN, GSTP1_HUMAN,
307
HPT_HUMAN, HSPB1_HUMAN, IGJ_HUMAN, NGAL_HUMAN, LYSC_HUMAN,
308
PERM_HUMAN,
309
SLPI_HUMAN. Similarily, proteins annotated for the GO terms GO:0000302
310
(response to reactive oxygen species), GO:0042542 (response to hydrogen
311
peroxide), GO:0000305 (response to oxygen radical), GO:0000303 (response to
312
superoxide), GO:0006979 (response to oxidative stress), GO:0000303 (response to
313
superoxide), GO:0071450 (cellular response to oxygen radical), GO:0034614
314
(cellular response to reactive oxygen species), or GO:0019430 (removal of
315
superoxide radicals) being responsible for the salivary antioxidative activity after 6-
316
gingerol
317
CATA_HUMAN, CYTC_HUMAN, GSTP1_HUMAN, HBA_HUMAN, HBB_HUMAN,
318
NGAL_HUMAN,
319
PRDX2_HUMAN, S10A7_HUMAN, SODC_HUMAN, and THIO_HUMAN. Mean
320
values for each protein per sample collection time as well as individual time profiles
321
of replicates were visualized using the R programming environment.
322
PRTN3_HUMAN,
stimulation
Enzymatic
lead
to
the
ECP_HUMAN,
following
PERL_HUMAN,
Assays.
Peroxidase
14
S10AC_HUMAN,
proteins:
PERM_HUMAN,
activity
was
and
ANXA1_HUMAN,
PRDX1_HUMAN,
determined
using
the
323
commercially available Amplex Red Hydrogen Peroxide/Peroxidase Assay Kit
324
(Invitrogen, Darmstadt, Germany) following the instructions of the manufacturer.
325
Saliva samples, freshly collected from four volunteers (2 female, 2 male) before (t0)
326
and after stimulation (t45) with 6-gingerol and citric acid, respectively, were pooled to
327
give a pooled pre-stimulus (t0) and a pooled post-stimulus sample (t45). After
328
centrifugation (13’200 rpm, 10 min, 4°C) and 1+1 dilution with the kit reaction buffer,
329
the samples (50 µL) were mixed with a working solution (50 µL) containing H2O2 and
330
the Amplex Red reagent, incubated for 30 min at room temperature and, then, ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
331
fluorescence was measured using an excitation wavelength of 544 nm and an
332
emission wavelength of 590 nm. Using a standard curve measured for horseradish
333
peroxidase (0, 0.02, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.25, 0.5, 1 and 2 mU/mL), the peroxidase activity
334
[mU/mL] was plotted against the fluorescence measured for the saliva samples.
335
The chloride oxidation activity of saliva was determined using the EnzCheck
336
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) Activity Assay Kit (Invitrogen, Darmstadt, Germany)
337
following the manufacturer’s instructions. Aliquots of saliva samples (50 µL),
338
collected and pooled from four volunteers (2 female, 2 male) before (t0) and after
339
citric acid stimulation (t45) were centrifuged (13’200 rpm, 10 min, 4°C), mixed 1+1
340
with the kit’s working solution (50 µL) containing H2O2 and 3’-(p-aminophenyl)
341
fluorescein (APF), incubated for 30 min at room temperature, and, then, the
342
fluorescence was measured using an excitation wavelength of 485 nm and an
343
emission wavelength of 530 nm. Using a standard curve measured for human
344
myeloperoxidase (0, 0.1, 0.2, 1, 2 and 5 mU/mL), the myeloperoxidase activity
345
[mU/mL] was plotted against the fluorescence measured for the saliva samples.
346
Lysozyme quantitation in saliva was performed by means of the EnzChek
347
Lysozyme Assay Kit (life technologies, Darmstadt, Germany) according to the
348
manual, however, using recombinant human lysozyme instead of the provided
349
standard. For assay calibration, a standard curve was recorded using defined
350
lysozyme concentrations (0.01, 0.005, 0.001, 0.0005, 0.0001 and 0 µg/µL). As the
351
calibration showed excellent linearity (y = 305447.58x + 67.21; R2 = 0.99), the non-
352
stimulated (t0) as well as the stimulated saliva (t45) had to be diluted to match the
353
calibration. After centrifugation (13’200 rpm, 10 min, 4°C) aliquots (100 µL) of the
354
non-stimulated saliva (t0) were 1+4 and 1+9 diluted with PBS buffer, aliquots (100 µL)
355
of stimulated saliva (t45) were 1+29 and 1+49 diluted with PBS buffer, and aliquots
356
(100 µL) of non-stimulated saliva (t0) spiked with lysozyme were 1+39 and 1+69 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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357
diluted with PBS buffer, respectively. Finally, aliquots (50 µL) of the respective
358
samples were mixed with the DQ lysozyme substrate working suspension (50 µL) in
359
a solid black 96-well-plate (round bottom; Corning®, Sigma Aldrich), and incubated
360
for 30 min at 37°C inside a FLUOstar OPTIMA (BMG Labtech) reader. The
361
fluorescence was recorded using the excitation at 485 nm and emission at 520 nm.
362
Using triplicate analysis in both dilutions, lysozyme concentration was calculated
363
from the average of the data determined in individual non-stimulated (t0) and
364
stimulated saliva samples (t45) collected from eleven volunteers. The lysozyme
365
concentrations determined in saliva samples at the same day time (10:00 am) on
366
three consecutive days were used to study interday variation, and those found at
367
10:00 am, 1:00 pm and 16:00 pm to investigate the intraday variation of the stimulus-
368
induced rise in salivary lysozyme levels. The same assay was used to quantitate the
369
lysozyme concentrations in saliva samples used for the microbial growth
370
experiments.
371
Molecular Weight Separation of Human Saliva. Stimulated saliva was
372
separated into a low molecular weight fraction (LMW, 3 kDa) using a Vivaspin Turbo 4 (Sartorius, Göttingen,
374
Germany) spinning tube following the manufacturer´s instructions. To achieve this,
375
the ultrafiltration tube (MW cutoff: 3 kDa) was centrifuged (7’500 rpm, 30 min, 4°C)
376
twice with water (4 mL) to wash the filtration membrane, then an aliquot (2 mL) of the
377
stimulated saliva (t45) was centrifuged (13’200 rpm, 10 min, 4°C) and the filtrate
378
(< 3 kDa) and the residue (> 3 kDa) was made up with PBS buffer to a final volume
379
of 2 mL to perform microbial growth experiments.
380
Microbial Growth Experiments. Aliquots (12 mL) of non-stimulated (t0) and
381
post-stimulus saliva samples (t45), each collected and pooled from six volunteers,
382
were centrifuged (13’200 rpm, 10 min, 4 °C) and after filtration using a syringe filter ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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383
(0.22 µm, Millex GP, Merck Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany), the supernatants were
384
used for growth experiments with Gram-positive and lysozyme sensitive species
385
Microbacterium oxydans (G4266) and Kocuria palustris (G4058) as well as
386
Staphylococcus aureus (G4508) as a lysozyme resistant control using an automated
387
plate
388
Finland). To perform the growth experiments, pre-cultures were prepared from a
389
single colony in tryptic soy broth (TSB, Roth, Karlsruhe, Germany) incubated at 30°C
390
for 22 h. Each strain pre-culture was inoculated 1:1000 with the double concentrated
391
TSB medium. An aliquot (100 µL) of inoculated medium was dispensed into each
392
well of a microplate and aliquots (100 µL) of the saliva samples were added. PBS
393
was used instead of saliva as a control. Analyses were performed at 30°C for 48
394
hours by shaking at medium intensity in the Bioscreen C™ instrument and measuring
395
the OD600 every 30 minutes. Every sample was measured in triplicate and four
396
independent experiments were carried out. Prior to the Bioscreen C™ experiments,
397
the lysozyme content of all samples was quantified by using the lysozyme assay.
reader
(BioScreen
C;
Oy
Growth
curves
Ab
Ltd,
Helsinki
398 399
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
400
In order to study the impact of chemosensory stimuli on human saliva flow and
401
salivary proteome alterations, healthy volunteers were orally challenged with a
402
stimulus-free control vehicle (water) and aqueous hyperthreshold solutions of the
403
sour tasting citric acid (stimulus S1; 156 mmol/L), the high-potency sweetener
404
aspartame (stimulus S2; 3.4 mmol/L), the beer’s bitter principle iso-α-acids (stimulus
405
S3; 0.3 mmol/L), the umami tasting monosodium L-glutamate (MSG, stimulus S4; 30
406
mmol/L), the salty tasting sodium chloride (NaCl, stimulus S5; 513 mmol/L), the
407
ginger’s pungent principle 6-gingerol (stimulus S6; 1.7 mmol/L), and Szechuan ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
408
pepper’s chemosensates hydroxy-α-sanshool (tingling, stimulus S7; 4 mmol/L) and
409
hydroxy-β-sanshool (numbing, stimulus S8; 4 mmol/L), respectively.
410
Influence of chemosensory stimuli on saliva flow. After cleansing the oral
411
cavity for 60 s with water, the healthy volunteers were asked to take stimulus-free
412
water (control, w/o) into the oral cavity, to perform chewing motions for 30 s and,
413
then, to expectorate into pre-weighed petri-dishes to give the pre-stimulus sample
414
(t0). Defined aliquots of the aqueous stimulus solutions (S1 – S8) were then taken
415
into the mouth and, after performing chewing motions for 15 s, the panellists were
416
asked to expectorate into pre-weighed petri-dishes to deliver the corresponding
417
stimulus sample (t15). The subjects were then requested to take up an aliquot of
418
water and, after performing chewing motions for 30 s, to expectorate to afford the first
419
post-stimulus saliva sample (t45), followed by another repetition of this last assay step
420
to give a second post-stimulus sample (t75). After addition of a protease inhibitor, the
421
saliva samples (t0 – t75) collected from eight different subjects at three independent
422
days were pooled and the amount of saliva was calculated from the weight difference
423
of the expectorated saliva/water mixture and the aliquot of the aqueous solutions
424
used to collect the saliva sample.
425
When compared to the control (water), which did not significantly affect salivation
426
from t0 to t75, citric acid (S1) showed the highest salivation inducing activity with a
427
saliva flow increase running through a maximum of ~110% at t45, followed by the
428
tingling hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7) and the pungent 6-gingerol (S6), both showing a
429
maximum saliva flow increase of ~60% at t45 (Figure 1). This confirms previous
430
reports on the salivation inducing activity of sour, tingling, and pungent taste stimuli46,
431
48, 61-66
432
by the configuration of a double bond, stimulation with equimolar concentrations of
433
the numbing hydroxy-β-sanshool (S8) showed a comparatively small saliva flow
. Although differing from the chemical structure of hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7) just
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
434
increase of 25% only (Figure 1). The salty stimulus (S5) induced a weaker but more
435
rapid saliva flow increase of about 30% at t15, whereas the sweet, bitter, and umami
436
stimuli S2-S4 affected saliva flow only to a marginal extend reaching a maximum of
437
~20% at t45 (Figure 1).
438
Salivary proteome alterations induced by chemosensory stimuli. In order
439
to investigate the influence of the dietary taste stimuli (S1 – S8) on the human saliva
440
proteome, proteins were precipitated from the collected saliva samples (t0, t15, t45,
441
t75), separated by SDS-PAGE and, after tryptic in-gel digestion, the cleaved peptides
442
were analyzed by means of nano-LC-MS/MS. A total number of 344 proteins were
443
identified by searching MS/MS spectra against a decoyed human IPI database and
444
using probabilistic protein identification algorithms with a threshold of at least two
445
independent peptide identifications (probability > 0.95). Only proteins with at least
446
two reliably identified peptides and at least four spectral counts for at least one
447
biological replicate in a group were considered for label-free protein quantification
448
using normalized spectral abundance factor (NSAF) values calculated from the
449
spectral counts of each individual identified protein49, 50.
450
Plotting the number of identified proteins for each of the eight taste stimuli
451
revealed, independent of the stimulus, a high number of identified proteins ranging
452
between 174 (S4) and 227 (S3) (Figure 2a). Among the 344 proteins identified in
453
total, a subset of 108 proteins were found in all eight datasets independent of the
454
stimulus and 15-39 proteins were found to be shared by two up to seven stimuli. In
455
comparison, 77 proteins were identified in saliva samples stimulated by only a single
456
stimulus, thus indicating the proteome alteration to be highly specific to the chemical
457
structure of the stimulus (Figure 2b).
458
To further narrow down the data set to the interesting target proteins, only
459
those proteins, which were significantly affected in abundance upon salivary ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
460
stimulation, were taken into further consideration. The highest number of 131
461
proteins was found to be modulated after stimulation with citric acid (S1), followed by
462
NaCl (S5), 6-gingerol (S6), and hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7) with 90, 81, and 66
463
significantly modulated proteins detected, respectively (Figure 2c). The saliva
464
samples collected after stimulation with the other tastants revealed a lower number of
465
significantly affected proteins ranging between 36 (S8) and 54 proteins (S2),
466
respectively. While not even a single protein was significantly modulated by each of
467
the eight stimuli and less than 20 out of the total number of proteins were found to be
468
affected by four to seven chemosensory stimuli, intriguingly, 105 proteins were found
469
to be significantly modulated upon stimulation with a single tastant (Figure 2d).
470
These data clearly demonstrate a stimulus-specific, rather than a generic impact of
471
chemosensates on saliva proteome composition.
472
PCA score plotting of log scaled protein abundances revealed a clear
473
separation of the eight stimuli with the largest proportion of the variance in the first
474
two principal components covered by longitudinal changes during stimulation with
475
citric acid (S1) and sodium chloride (S5), respectively (Figure 3). Visualization of
476
trajectories connecting the mean scores for the individual time intervals (t0 → t75) of
477
each stimulus showed protein pattern shifts in different directions, again indicating
478
stimulus-specific effects. For example, time-resolved analysis of proteome changes
479
induced by citric acid (S1) revealed a major impact immediately after stimulation (t15),
480
followed by smaller changes on the way back to the control sample (t0), thus
481
demonstrating the instantaneous salivary response to that stimulus (Figure 3).
482
Gene ontology term enrichment analysis. In order to investigate whether the
483
observed stimuli-dependent proteome alterations may translate into a modulation of
484
saliva’s biological activities and to visualize functional inter-relationships, a gene
485
ontology (GO) enrichment analysis was performed67-69. To identify biological ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
486
functions associated with significantly enriched proteins upon a chemosensory
487
stimulation, enrichment of GO-terms of the subontology “biological process”,
488
representing molecular events with a defined beginning and end, pertinent to the
489
functioning of integrated living units such as cells, tissues, and organisms, was
490
calculated using Fisher´s exact test and the ensemble of proteins detected in human
491
saliva as the background proteome18. Using a p-value of 0.01 as cut-off after
492
adjusting for multiple tests51, a total of 460 enriched GO-terms for the set of eight
493
stimuli was obtained ranging from 247 for citric acid (S1), 197 for sodium chloride
494
(S5), and 155 for 6-gingerol (S6) to lower numbers of 108 for hydroxy-α-sanshool
495
(S7), 96 for iso-α-acids (S3), 85 for mono sodium L-glutamate (S4), 80 for aspartame
496
(S2), and 49 for hydroxy-β-sanshool (S8), respectively. To highlight GO-terms
497
associated with the chemosensory stimulation, the enrichment result was filtered for
498
terms that are offspring of the term compiling “response to stimulus” functions
499
(GO:0050896) including processes that result in a change in state or activity of a cell
500
or organism as a result of a stimulus and lead to functions such as enzyme
501
production, gene expression, secretion, or chemotaxis, respectively. The remaining
502
GO-terms were subsequently analyzed for semantic similarities applying a graph-
503
based method70, which determines the semantic similarity of two GO-terms based on
504
both the locations of these terms in the GO-graphs and their relations with their
505
ancestor terms (Figure 4)58. Cluster analysis using the semantic similarities as
506
distance matrix lead to a grouping of enriched GO terms with closely related
507
biological functions, which were subsequently compared for group by the individual
508
chemosensory stimuli S1 – S8 (Figure 4).
509
Whereas stimulation with iso-α-acids (S3) and mono sodium L-glutamate (S4)
510
delivered only minor GO term enrichments, GO-terms related to immune response
511
and to response to bacteria were enriched highly significantly in the saliva collected ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
512
after simulation of citric acid (S1), e.g. the enriched GO-terms “response to other
513
organism” (GO:0051707; p-value: 3.8×10-5), “response to bacterium” (GO:0009617;
514
p-value: 2.5×10-5), “response to external biotic stimulus” (GO:0043207; p-value:
515
3.8×10-5), “antimicrobial humoral response” (GO:0019730; p-value: 1.1×10-7), and
516
“defense response to bacterium” (GO:0042742; p-value: 5.4×10-6) show evidence for
517
the citric acid induced alterations of the saliva proteome to boot a molecular defense
518
network against microorganisms.
519
In comparison, the NaCl as well as the 6-gingerol challenge led to a strong
520
enrichment of GO terms related to detoxification and immune response, while GO-
521
terms related to oxidative stress were solely enriched after 6-gingerol stimulation.
522
The GO-terms “response to reactive oxygen species” (GO:0000302; p-value: 2.9×10-
523
8
524
oxygen radical” (GO:0000305; p-value: 7.9×10-5), or “cellular response to oxygen
525
radical” (GO:0071450; p-value: 7.9×10-5) respectively, were highly enriched after 6-
526
gingerol activation when compared to the background proteome (Figure 4,
527
supporting information).
), “response to hydrogen peroxide” (GO:0042542; p-value: 1.4×10-5), “response to
528
Chemosensory modulation of biological saliva functions. In order to
529
identify those significantly modulated proteins showing the highest contribution to the
530
highly significant enrichment of oxidative stress related GO-terms in the 6-gingerol
531
dataset, those proteins contributing most to the enriched GO-terms were extracted.
532
Among the 14 proteins extracted (Figure 5), cystatin C (CYTC_HUMAN) and
533
lactoperoxidase (PERL_HUMAN) showed the strongest increase in abundance upon
534
6-gingerol stimulation, whereas the other 12 proteins were affected only to a minor
535
extent. While cystatin C has been reported to show proteinase inhibitory71,
536
antimicrobial activity in saliva73, salivary lactoperoxidase plays a crucial role in the
537
peroxidase innate defense system74. The latter enzyme is reported to catalyze the ACS Paragon Plus Environment
72
and
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Page 22 of 51
538
oxidation of thiocyanate (0.5 – 2 mmol/L in saliva) by hydrogen peroxide (8 – 14
539
µmol/L in saliva) to produce hypothiocyanate, an antimicrobial agent that inhibits the
540
growth of a wide range of microorganism including oral pathogens like Streptococcus
541
species, Porphyromonas gingivalis, and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans74-
542
76
.
543
The 14 target proteins were also searched among the significantly modulated
544
proteins in the datasets of the other seven stimuli (supplementary information).
545
Interestingly, lactoperoxidase was also found to be modulated to some extent after
546
stimulation with hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7), whereas stimulation with citric acid (S1)
547
translated
548
myeloperoxidase (supplementary information). In the other datasets, no peroxidases
549
were found to be significantly increased in abundance upon stimulation.
into
an
increasing
abundance
of
another
peroxidase,
namely
550
To investigate whether the increased abundance in lactoperoxidase in gingerol-
551
stimulated saliva translates into an increased enzymatic activity, the lactoperoxidase
552
activity was measured in saliva collected before (t0) and 45 s after 6-gingerol
553
stimulation (t45) by means of a fluorescence assay (Figure 6a). The peroxidase
554
activity in saliva showed a significant 2.5-fold increase from 0.37±0.02 (t0) to
555
0.91±0.05 mU/mL (t45), thus confirming that the increased abundance of the protein
556
observed upon 6-gingerol stimulation leads to an increased peroxidase activity of
557
saliva.
558
In contrast to 6-gingerol (S6), the salivary stimulation with citric acid (S2)
559
induced an increase of salivary abundance of myeloperoxidase (Fig. 6b), which is
560
known to catalyze the oxidation of chloride ions (10 – 56 mmol/L in resting saliva) by
561
hydrogen peroxide to generate hypochloride ions acting as a strong antimicrobial
562
agent in saliva74. To study whether the increased concentration of this protein is
563
translated into a higher enzymatic activity in saliva, the peroxidase activity as well as ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 51
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
564
the activity to oxidize chloride to hypochlorite were measured before (t0) and after
565
stimulation (t45) with citric acid (Figure 6b). Myeloperoxidase activity increased from
566
0.24±0.04 (t0) to 0.70±0.1 mU/mL (t45). Whereas the saliva sample t0 did not show
567
any significant amounts of hypochlorite, the activated saliva (t45) generated elevated
568
levels of OCl- (Figure 6b), thus indicating that the citric acid stimulation induces a
569
significant raise in myeloperoxidase abundance, followed by a significant increase in
570
the antimicrobial agent hypochlorite.
571
In comparison, a total of 22 significantly modulated proteins showed the highest
572
contribution to the significant enrichment of “response to bacteria” related GO-terms
573
in the citric acid dataset (Figure 7). Among the proteins extracted, lysozyme
574
(LYSC_HUMAN) showed by far the strongest increase in abundance upon citric acid
575
stimulation, whereas the other 21 proteins were affected to a much lower extent
576
(supplementary information).
577
To validate the strong increase of lysozyme abundance, the concentration of
578
lysozyme was enzymatically determined in resting saliva (t0) and citric acid stimulated
579
saliva (t45) collected from eleven individuals. To investigate intra-day and inter-day
580
variation of citric acid induced lysozyme stimulation, saliva samples were collected at
581
three time slots at the same day (10:00 am, 1:00 and 4:00 pm) and at the same time
582
(10:00 pm) on three consecutive days (Figure 8). While non-stimulated saliva (t0)
583
contained lysozyme in low levels of 0.006 - 0.01 µg/µL, citric acid stimulation induced
584
a more than 10-fold increased lysozyme secretion to reach concentrations of 0.10 –
585
0.14 (intraday; Figure 8a) and 0.11 – 0.15 µg/µL (interday; Figure 8b) in activated
586
saliva (t45), without showing major inter-individual differences.
587
Inhibition of bacterial growth. To investigate as to whether the citric acid
588
induced increase of lysozyme levels translates into an enhanced antimicrobial activity
589
of saliva on Gram-positive bacteria, growth experiments were carried out using the ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
590
lysozyme-sensitive species Microbacterium oxydans and Kocuria palustris, as well as
591
Staphylococcus aureus as a lysozyme resistant control, each incubated in TSB in the
592
absence or presence of non-stimulated saliva (t0), stimulated saliva (t45), and non-
593
stimulated saliva (t0) spiked with lysozyme to adjust the concentration to the levels
594
determined in stimulated saliva, respectively. For each growth inhibition experiment
595
four biological replicates and three analytical replicates were performed and
596
averaged into one growth curve (Figure 9). The growth of the control strain S. aureus
597
was neither inhibited by stimulated saliva (t45), nor by non-stimulated saliva (t0)
598
spiked with lysozyme to adjust the concentration to the level of 0.152±0.045 µg/µL
599
determined in stimulated saliva (Fig. 9a), confirming the well-known resistance of S.
600
aureus against lysozyme77. In contrast, the growth of M. oxydans and K. palustris
601
was strongly affected or even completely inhibited in the presence of stimulated
602
saliva (Fig. 9b,c), thus confirming a direct inhibitory effect of stimulated saliva (t45) on
603
the growth of these lysozyme-sensitive bacteria.
604
To investigate whether, next to high-molecular weight (HMW) biopolymers like
605
lysozyme, also low-molecular weight (LMW) metabolites account for the growth
606
inhibitory activity of stimulated saliva, activated (t45) saliva samples were fractionated
607
by means of ultrafiltration using a 3 kDa cut-off and both molecular weight fractions
608
were again tested for their anti-growth potential. Growth curves recorded in the
609
presence of the LMW fraction (< 3 kDa), where all proteins including lysozyme had
610
been removed, perfectly matched the control curves using PBS (Figure 9b, c). In
611
comparison, the presence of the HMW fraction (> 3 kDa) containing 0.15±0.03 µg/µL
612
lysozyme induced growth inhibition resembling the data recorded for stimulated t45
613
saliva (Figure 9b, c). These data clearly demonstrate the observed growth inhibitory
614
activity of citric acid stimulated saliva to be primarily caused by lysozyme.
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Page 25 of 51
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
615
In summary, saliva flow measurements, SDS-PAGE separation of human
616
saliva, followed by tryptic digestion, nano-HPLC-MS/MS, and label-free quantitation
617
demonstrated a stimulus- and time-dependent influence of dietary taste compounds
618
on salivation and the salivary proteome alteration. Gene ontology enrichment
619
analysis showed evidence for the tastant-induced alterations of the saliva proteome
620
to trigger innate protective mechanisms and an enhanced level of antimicrobial
621
defense. An oral challenge with 6-gingerol increased the abundance of cystatin C,
622
showing proteinase inhibitory71,
623
lactoperoxidase, which plays a key role in the peroxidase innate defense system74,
624
catalyzes
625
hypothiocyanate (OSCN-), and has been reported to inhibit the growth of a wide
626
range of microorganism74-76. In comparison, citric acid stimulation induced an
627
increase of myeloperoxidase, reported to catalyze the oxidation of chloride ions to
628
generate antimicrobial hypochloride ions (OCl-) in saliva74 and lysozyme, well-known
629
to exhibit antimicrobial activity on gram-positive bacteria21, 73, 77.
the
oxidative
72
and antimicrobial activity in saliva73, and
conversion
of
thiocyanate
into
the
antimicrobial
630
Functional analysis of these target enzyme activities confirmed the increase of
631
the salivary lactoperoxidase activity from 0.37±0.02 (t0) to 0.91±0.05 mU/mL (t45)
632
after oral 6-gingerol stimulation, while citric acid induced the increase of
633
myeloperoxidase activity from 0.24±0.04 (t0) to 0.70±0.1 mU/mL (t45) and salivary
634
lysozyme levels from 0.006 – 0.01 µg/µL (t0) to 0.10 – 0.15 (t45). As the stimulus-
635
induced salivary proteome response was observed instantaneously upon stimulation,
636
any proteome modulation is very likely to result from the release of proteins from
637
preformed vesicles and not from de novo synthesis which in exocrine cells were
638
shown to take about 30 min to pass from the rough endoplasmatic reticulum to the
639
condensing vacuoles79. As lactoperoxidase is released from the salivary glands and
640
myeloperoxidase is produced by neutrophil granulocytes entering the oral cavity and ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
641
is also present in the gingival crevicular fluid73, the stimulus-specific release of these
642
enzymes indicates rather specific and different sites of action of 6-gingerol and citric
643
acid.
644
The data indicate that oral stimulation with 6-gingerol and citric acid,
645
respectively, may activate the innate defense and enhanced antimicrobial function of
646
saliva through the increased generation of the antimicrobial agents OSCN-
647
(lactoperoxidase) and OCl- (myeloperoxidase) catalyzed by salivary peroxidases as
648
well as the enhanced release of lysozyme. This latter enzyme, produced primarily
649
from the sublingual saliva glands80 and also by neutrophil granulocytes entering the
650
mouth78, induces lysis of gram-positive bacteria by its muramidase activity
651
hydrolysing the β-1,4-glycosidic bonds between N-acetylmuramic acid and N-acetyl-
652
D-glucosamine
653
positive bacteria Microbacterium oxydans and Kocuria palustris in the presence of
654
non-stimulated and stimulated saliva samples clearly demonstrated for the first time
655
that the increase of the salivary lysozyme abundance upon oral chemosensory
656
stimulation translates into an enhanced biological function, that is an almost complete
657
growth inhibition of the gram-positive microorganisms tested. The effects of the
658
various antimicrobial agents may also be additive or synergistic, resulting in the
659
activation of an efficient molecular defense network of the oral cavity through
660
chemosensory stimulation upon food ingestion.
of the cell wall peptidoglycan78. Growth experiments with gram-
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The depth and relatively straightforward nature of the developed analytical
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workflow should make it a powerful tool enabling a better understanding of stimulus-
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triggered alterations of the oral proteome and, in consequence, of saliva’s biological
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functions. Such approaches will help to better understand the mechanisms triggering
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the molecular defense network and open new avenues for innovative oral care
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applications triggering innate defense mechanisms in the mouth. ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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SUPPORTING INFORMATION AVAILABLE
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Data on identified proteins, Uniprot identifier, and NSAF data before and after
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chemosensory stimulation are available free of charge via the Internet at
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http://pubs.acs.org.
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FIGURE LEGENDS
940 Figure 1.
Time course of saliva flow affected by chemosensory stimuli. Saliva samples were collected from eight individuals before stimulation (t0), after a 15 sec chemosensory stimulation (t15), and 30 (t45) and 60 sec after stimulation (t75) with the following aqueous stimuli solutions: (a) stimulus-free vehicle (water; control), (b) citric acid (stimulus S1; 156 mmol/L), (c) aspartame (stimulus S2; 3.4 mmol/L), (d) iso-α-acids (stimulus S3; 0.3 mmol/L), (e) mono sodium L-glutamate (stimulus S4; 30 mmol/L), (f) NaCl (stimulus S5; 513 mmol/L), (g) 6-gingerol (stimulus S6; 1,7 mmol/L), (h) hydroxy-α-sanshool (stimulus S7; 4 mmol/L), and (i) hydroxy-βsanshool (stimulus S8; 4 mmol/L), respectively. The thin lines indicate the individual replicates, the bold line indicates the mean value, and the colored area surrounding the mean curve indicates the simple standard deviation.
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Figure 2.
Number of proteins identified in human saliva after chemosensory stimulation. Stimuli used were citric acid (S1; 156 mmol/L), aspartame (S2; 3.4 mmol/L), iso-α-acids (S3; 0.3 mmol/L), mono sodium L-glutamate (S4; 30 mmol/L), NaCl (S5; 513 mmol/L); 6gingerol (S6; 1,7 mmol/L), hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7; 4 mmol/L), and hydroxy-β-sanshool (S8; 4 mmol/L), respectively. (a) Total number of proteins identified per stimuli (S1-S8). (b) Number of proteins shared by single or multiple (two to eight) stimuli. (c) Number of significantly modulated proteins per stimulus. (d) Number of significantly modulated proteins shared by single or multiple (two to eight) stimuli.
Figure 3.
PCA score plot of log-scaled protein abundances in control (t0), stimulated saliva (t15), and post-stimulation saliva samples (t45, t75). Stimuli used were citric acid (S1; 156.0 mmol/L), aspartame (S2; 3.4 mmol/L), iso-α-acids (S3; 0.3 mmol/L), mono sodium Lglutamate (S4; 30.0 mmol/L), NaCl (S5; 513.0 mmol/L); 6-gingerol (S6; 1,7 mmol/L), hydroxy-α-sanshool (S7; 4.0 mmol/L), and hydroxy-β-sanshool (S8; 4.0 mmol/L). Trajectories connecting the mean scores for the individual time intervals (t0 → t75) of each stimulus are shown as arrows.
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Figure 4.
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GO enrichment analysis after chemosensory stimulation with citric acid (S1; 156.0 mmol/L), aspartame (S2; 3.4 mmol/L), iso-α-acids (S3; 0.3 mmol/L), mono sodium L-glutamate (S4; 30.0 mmol/L), NaCl (S5; 513 mmol/L); 6-gingerol (S6; 1.7 mmol/L), hydroxy-αsanshool (S7; 4 mmol/L), and hydroxy-β-sanshool (S8; 4.0 mmol/L), respectively.
Figure 5.
Time course of significantly modulated salivary proteins with highest contribution to the significant enrichment of oxidative stress related GO-terms in the 6-gingerol dataset (Cluster B; Figure 4). Saliva samples were collected before stimulation (t0), after a 15 sec stimulation with 6-gingerol (S6; 1.7 mmol/L) (t15), and 30 (t45) and 60 sec after stimulation (t75). The thin lines indicate the individual replicates, the bold line indicates the mean value.
Figure 6.
Time course and enzymatic activity of lactoperoxidase upon 6-
gingerol
stimulation
and
myeloperoxidase
upon
citric
acid
stimulation. (a) Lactoperoxidase abundance (left) and peroxidase activity (right) in saliva samples collected before stimulation (t0), after a 15 sec stimulation with 6-gingerol (S6; 1.7 mmol/L) (t15), and 30 (t45) and 60 sec after stimulation (t75). (b) Myeloperoxidase abundance (left), enzymatic activity (middle), and chlorination activity (right) in saliva samples collected before stimulation (t0), after a 15 sec stimulation with citric acid (S1; 156 mmol/L) (t15), and 30 (t45) and 60 sec after stimulation (t75).
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Figure 7.
Time course of significantly modulated salivary proteins with highest contribution to the significant enrichment of response to bacterium related GO-terms upon citric acid stimulation (Cluster A; Figure 4). Saliva samples were collected before stimulation (t0), after a 15 sec stimulation with citric acid (S1; 156 mmol/L) (t15), and 30 (t45) and 60 sec after stimulation (t75). The thin lines indicate the individual replicates, the bold line indicates the mean value.
Figure 8.
Box plots of salivary lysozyme concentrations before (t0) and after stimulation (t45) with citric acid (S1). (a) Interday variation (n=11). (b) intraday variation (n=11).
Figure 9.
Growth curves of selected microorganisms in the presence of saliva samples. (a) Staphylococcus aureus, (b) Microbacterium oxydans, (c) and Kocuria palustris.
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