Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences (Nov 2023)

Salivary proteomic profile of young healthy subjects

  • P. Dongiovanni,
  • M. Meroni,
  • Gilda Aiello,
  • A. D’Amato,
  • N. Cenzato,
  • S. Casati,
  • G. Damiani,
  • C. Fenoglio,
  • D. Galimberti,
  • D. Galimberti,
  • E. Grossi,
  • D. Prati,
  • G. Lamorte,
  • C. Bianco,
  • L. Valenti,
  • A. Soggiu,
  • S. Zapperi,
  • C. A. M. La Porta,
  • M. Del Fabbro,
  • M. Del Fabbro,
  • G. M. Tartaglia,
  • G. M. Tartaglia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2023.1327233
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Background: The incidence of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) has been rapidly ramped up worldwide. Hence, there is an urgent need to non-invasively detect NCDs possibly by exploiting saliva as a ‘liquid biopsy’ to identify biomarkers of the health status. Since, the absence of standardized procedures of collection/analysis and the lack of normal ranges makes the use of saliva still tricky, our purpose was to outline a salivary proteomic profile which features healthy individuals.Methods: We collected saliva samples from 19 young blood donors as reference population and the proteomic profile was investigated through mass-spectrometry.Results: We identified 1,004 proteins of whose 243 proteins were shared by all subjects. By applying a data clustering approach, we found a set of six most representative proteins across all subjects including Coronin-1A, F-actin-capping protein subunit alpha, Immunoglobulin J chain, Prosaposin, 78 kDa glucose-regulated protein and Heat shock 70 kDa protein 1A and 1B.Conclusion: All of these proteins are involved in immune system activation, cellular stress responses, proliferation, and invasion thus suggesting their use as biomarkers in patients with NCDs.

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