MALDI-Mass Spectrometry Imaging Identifies ... - SAGE Journals

1 downloads 0 Views 698KB Size Report
Feb 7, 2015 - Amyloid was detected by Congo red staining viewed under polarized light to show green birefringence and Congo red fluorescence.
595264

research-article2015

JHCXXX10.1369/0022155415595264Winter et al.Vitronectin: A Constituent of Amyloid Deposits

Article Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry 2015, Vol. 63(10) 772­–779 © The Author(s) 2015 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1369/0022155415595264 jhc.sagepub.com

MALDI-Mass Spectrometry Imaging Identifies Vitronectin as a Common Constituent of Amyloid Deposits Martin Winter, Andreas Tholey, Sandra Krüger, Hartmut Schmidt, and Christoph Röcken

Department of Pathology (MW, SK, CR), Research Group Systematic Proteome Research, Institute of Experimental Medicine (AT), ChristianAlbrechts-University, Kiel, Germany (AT); and Department of Transplant Medicine, University Hospital Münster, Münster, Germany (HS)

Summary Amyloids are pathological intra- and extracellular fibrillar aggregates of polypeptides with a cross-β-sheet structure and characteristic tinctorial properties. The amyloid deposits commonly enclose several non-fibrillar components of the extracellular matrix. Their potential to regulate the formation and aggregation process of amyloid fibrils is still poorly understood. For a better understanding of the role of the extracellular matrix in amyloidosis, it is essential to gain deeper insights into the composition of amyloid deposits. Here, we utilized matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry imaging to identify extracellular matrix compounds in amyloid deposits. Using this technique, we identified and determined the spatial distribution of vitronectin within AApoAI-, ALλ-, ATTR- and AIns amyloid deposits and, using immunohistochemistry, validated the spatial overlap of vitronectin with amyloids in 175 cases with diverse types of amyloid in several different tissues. (J Histochem Cytochem 63:772–779, 2015) Keywords amyloid, formalin-fixed/paraffin-embedded tissue, immunohistochemistry, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization, mass spectrometry imaging, vitronectin

Introduction Amyloids are pathological intra- and extracellular fibrillar aggregates of polypeptides with a cross-β-sheet structure (Sachse et al. 2008; Sunde et al. 1997) and characteristic tinctorial properties (Howie and Brewer 2009; Howie et al. 2008; Puchtler et al. 1962), which disrupt tissue and organ function and result in a broad spectrum of different amyloid diseases. Currently, 31 different autologous proteins and peptides have been identified to form amyloid fibrils (Sipe et al. 2014). Aside from the amyloid fibril proteins, the deposits always enclose other components, such as amyloid-P-component, the highly sulfated glycosaminoglycans, as well as proteoglycans and various serum-derived proteins (Röcken and Eriksson 2009), which are specifically enriched in the deposits and may contribute to the pathology. In addition, many of these components are constituents of the extracellular matrix (ECM) (Merlini and Bellotti

2003). However, the role of the ECM in amyloidogenesis is still ill-defined, and the discovery of novel non-fibrillar constituents of amyloid deposits may shed further light on the complex etiology and pathology of the disease. In this study, we used matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI). This is a novel technology that combines mass spectrometry with two-dimensional imaging and is able to provide both the m/z values of peptides/proteins in tissue sections and their spatial distribution. Unlike conventional mass spectrometric technologies (Klein et al. 2011; Nasr et al. Received for publication February 7, 2015; accepted Jun 16, 2015. Corresponding Author: Christoph Röcken, Department of Pathology, Christian-AlbrechtsUniversity, Arnold-Heller-Str. 3, Haus 14, D-24105 Kiel, Germany. E-mail: [email protected]

773

Vitronectin: A Constituent of Amyloid Deposits 2013; Roden et al. 2010; Rodriguez et al. 2008; Sethi et al. 2010, 2012; Vrana et al. 2009), in MALDI-MSI, a tissue section is mounted onto a glass slide or metal plate, and not homogenized, thereby maintaining the spatial resolution and facilitating a correlation with histoanatomical structures and pathologies; e.g., amyloid. The tissue section is covered with a matrix solution using a robotic nebulizer or spotter device. During this process, the analytes are extracted and will co-crystallize with the matrix, thereby maintaining their local position. The matrix consists of an organic compound that is able to absorb at the wavelength of the applied laser, which is an essential step of the desorption/ionization mechanism. The acquisition is conducted at distinct positions according to a two-dimensional raster of x,y-coordinates equal to the number of pixels in the image. For each position, a spectrum containing the detected masses and their intensities is obtained. The data are imported into an imaging software to reconstruct massresolved images of the tissue section (for further details see (Chughtai and Heeren 2010; Jones et al. 2012)). By applying MALDI-MSI to four different amyloid cases and a validation cohort of 175 formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue samples from a large variety of different amyloid diseases analyzed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), we identified vitronectin (VTN) as a common constituent of amyloid.

Materials & Methods Patients Amyloid-laden, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue samples from 175 patients with different types of amyloid were obtained from the Amyloid Registry of the University of Kiel. The samples included tissues from brain (8 patients), nose (1), lip (1), salivary gland (1), lung (8), heart (27), tongue (3), stomach (12), small intestine (10), large intestine (20), liver (6), spleen (1), kidney (19), bladder (5), carpal tunnel ligament and synovialis (19), intervertebral disc (1), lymph node (2), skin (4), subcutaneous fat (12), soft tissue (5) and bone marrow (10). The study was conducted after the surgical pathological investigations had been completed.

Histology and Immunohistochemistry Amyloid was detected by Congo red staining viewed under polarized light to show green birefringence and Congo red fluorescence. Immunohistochemical classification was carried out as described in detail elsewhere (Kebbel and Röcken 2006; Yumlu et al. 2009; Schönland et al. 2012; Gioeva et al. 2013) with commercially available monoclonal antibodies directed against AA amyloid, vitronectin (Merck Millipore; Darmstadt, Germany), insulin (BioGenese) and β2-microglobulin (β2M), and polyclonal

antibodies directed against amyloid P-component, λ-light chain, κ-light chain, fibrinogen, and Aβ amyloid (all from DAKO; Hamburg, Germany). In addition, we used non-commercially available polyclonal antibodies directed against apolipoprotein AI (anti-apoAI), transthyretin (TTR3), λ-light chain (AL1, AL3 and AL7), and κ-light chain (AK3) (Kebbel and Röcken 2006; Schönland et al. 2012; Gioeva et al. 2013). Immunostaining for vitronectin was evaluated first by documenting the presence of any vitronectin immunostaining within amyloid deposits, and subsequently by categorizing the percentage of the vitronectin-positive amyloid areas for each case as 0%, ≤10%, 11-90%, >90%.

Mass Spectrometry Chemicals.  Modified sequence-grade trypsin was purchased from Promega (Mannheim, Germany) and α-cyano-4hydroxycinnamic acid (α-CHCA) from LaserBio Labs (Sophia-Antipolis Cedex, France). Double-distilled water (DDW) was obtained from Carl Roth (Karlsruhe, Germany) and xylene from BüFa (Lübeck, Germany). Acetonitril, ethanol were purchased from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany) and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), ammonium bicarbonate, octyl-α/β-glucoside (OcGlc), red phosphorous and acetone from Sigma-Aldrich (Steinheim, Germany). Biological Tissues.  Five micrometer sections of FFPE human liver, heart (two different cases) and subcutaneous abdominal tissue containing AApoAI-, ALλ-, ATTR- and AIns amyloid, respectively, were prepared using a microtome (Leica Biosystems; Nussloch, Germany). The sections were mounted onto histological glass slides (SuperFrost® Plus, Menzel-Gläser) and dried at 54°C overnight. Tissue sections were stored at 4°C until further use. Dewaxing and Rehydration.  For dewaxing (removal of paraffin), FFPE tissue sections were immersed in xylene for 2 × 10 min, then rehydrated for 2 × 2 min in 99% ethanol, 70% ethanol, 50% ethanol, followed by 2 × 1 min in DDW. Tissue sections were dried at room temperature in a desiccator under a light vacuum of -400 mBar for at least 15 min before trypsin and matrix deposition. On-Tissue Digestion. Trypsin solution (20 µg/ml) was prepared in 50 mM ammonium bicarbonate buffer (pH 8.1) containing 0.5% OcGlc. Deposition onto the tissue section was done using a SunCollect Micro Fraction Collector/MALDI Spotter (SunChrom, Friedrichsdorf, Germany) in spraying mode at a flow rate of 20 µl/min over 10 layers. After trypsin deposition, the section was incubated for 2 hr at 37°C in a humid environment using a homemade incubation chamber. Matrix Deposition. Five milligram of α-CHCA was dissolved in 1 ml ACN:H2O (50:50) containing 0.1% TFA and

774 sonicated for 5 min. The matrix solution was sprayed onto the tissue section using the SunCollect Micro Fraction Collector/MALDI Spotter. The deposition was performed with an increasing flow rate over the first three layers. The first layer was performed at 10 µl/min, the second at 20 µl/min, and the final eight layers at 30 µl/min.

MALDI-MS-Imaging The instrument was calibrated before the MALDI-MSI experiment using signals of red phosphorous (oversaturated in acetone) between 100 and 3,000 m/z. Data were acquired in positive-ion mode (V-mode, sensitivity) using a MALDI SYNAPT G2-S system (Waters Corporation, Manchester, UK) operating with a 1 kHz Nd:YAG laser. To define the regions for acquisition, digital scans (Epson® Perfection 1640SU) of tissue sections were imported into the High Definition Imaging (HDI) software (Waters Corporation). All image data were acquired in the mass range from 700 to 3,000 m/z with a spatial resolution at 200 µm and 1,000 laser shots per position. Peptide images were generated for the 1,000 most intense signals with HDI software using a bin size of 0.1 Da for the mass range 900-3,000 m/z and an external lock mass ([Glu1]-fibrinopeptide) for recalibrating the data.

Direct MALDI-MS/MS Instrument calibration and definition of regions to be acquired was performed as described above for MS measurements; the spatial resolution and acquisition mode were also equivalent with those applied in MS-mode. Fragmentation was carried out in the transfer cell of the TriWave region (Pringle et al. 2007). Peptides were fragmented utilizing an optimized 20 eV collision energy ramp according to the precursor mass (PM). All data were acquired in the mass range from 100 to PM+50 m/z and processed with the MassLynx software (Waters Corporation). The masses were corrected with an external lock mass ([Glu1]fibrinopeptide) and deisotoped using the MaxEnt 3 algorithm. The resultant peak list was submitted to a MASCOT (Matrix Science, London, UK) query search against the Swiss-Prot database (2012_03). The parent and fragment ion tolerances were set at 25 ppm and 0.2 Da, respectively. One missed cleavage and methionine oxidation as variable modifications were also included.

Results MALDI-MS-Imaging on FFPE Amyloid-laden Human Tissue Sections In the first set of experiments, we used FFPE liver tissue from a 68-year-old woman with hereditary AApoAI

Winter et al. Winter et al. amyloidosis, heart tissue from a 51-year-old man with ALλ amyloidosis, heart tissue from a 62-year-old woman with hereditary ATTR amyloidosis, and subcutaneous abdominal tissue from a 38-year-old woman with AIns amyloidosis. For all four cases, unknown peptides at m/z 1646.815, 1422.661 and 1314.682 were detected when conducting the MALDI-MSI experiment. Figure 1B–1D displays the spatial distribution of the AApoAI amyloidladen liver tissue exhibiting local maxima of intensity, thus showing protein deposits typical for amyloid plaques. Comparing the peptide mass images with the ApoAI-immunostaining (Fig. 1A) revealed a similar distribution pattern for the positive-stained amyloid areas and the local intensity maxima of all three peptides. This result indicates the co-localization of these peptides within amyloid deposits. These observations were also made for the ALλ-, ATTR- and AIns amyloid cases (Supplemental Fig. 2). MS spectra of amyloid deposits are given in the supplementary section for all four samples (Supplemental Fig. 2).

MALDI-MS/MS of Vitronectin on FFPE Amyloidogenic Human Tissue Sections Direct MALDI-MS/MS was carried out to identify the three peptides at m/z 1646.815, 1422.661 and 1314.682 observed in the MSI experiment. When submitting the processed data to a MASCOT query search, all three peptides were identified as tryptic peptides of the glycoprotein vitronectin (Table 1). An example of the MS/MS spectra is given in Fig. 1I. The three identified peptides are proteotypic; this describes peptides with amino acid sequences unique for vitronectin, allowing unambiguous identification unlike so-called shared peptides that harbor sequences that could be part of other proteins. This result was validated by immunostaining with an antibody against vitronectin (Fig. 1E). The positive red staining in the IHC image and the local maxima of intensity in the peptide images demonstrate a similar distribution within the tissue section. These findings indicate that vitronectin is present within AApoAI amyloid deposits, particularly when comparing IHC images with a congruent staining pattern (Fig. 1A, 1E). Similar validations were carried out for ALλ-, ATTR- and AIns amyloid cases (Supplemental Fig. 2 and Supplemental Table 1). In addition, direct MALDI-MS/MS identified tryptic peptides of apolipoprotein E (apoE) and serum amyloid P-component (SAP) on the AApoAI amyloid-laden liver tissue, which are both known to be common components of amyloid deposits (Table 1). Figure 1F−1H show the spatial distribution of the corresponding peptides at m/z 1406.672 (SAP), and 968.553 and 948.526 (apoE) with an intensity pattern similar to the peptides of vitronectin and the apoAI-immunostaining.

Vitronectin: A Constituent of Amyloid Deposits

775

Figure 1. Immunohistochemical staining of apoAI (A) and vitronectin (VTN; E) shows high intensity staining for amyloid deposits in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded amyloidogenic liver tissue sections. MALDI-MS images display the spatial distribution of tryptic peptides belonging to VTN (B−D), SAP (F) and apoE (G, H) within the tissue section. For all peptides, high signal intensities were detected in the amyloid deposits. The MALDI-MS/MS spectrum (I) displays the fragmentation pattern of the tryptic peptide at m/z 1646 identified as VTN. Scale, 2 mm.

Immunohistochemical Validation of the Presence of Vitronectin within Diverse Types of Amyloids The results of the MALDI-MSI experiments led to the suggestion that vitronectin may be a common component of amyloids. Subsequently, the presence and histoanatomical distribution of vitronectin was validated in 175 amyloidcontaining tissue samples from 175 patients with diverse types of amyloid, including 107 (61%) men and 68 (39%) women. The age of the patients ranged from 23 to 94 years. The tissue samples of all patients showed variable amounts of amyloid deposits, demonstrating the typical apple-green birefringence in polarized light after Congo red staining. Immunostaining with an antibody against vitronectin was positive in the amyloid deposits of 170 (98%) cases (Table 2). To visualize the spatial distribution of vitronectin in

different amyloid types, Congo red-stained tissue sections were observed with fluorescence microscopy (Fig. 2). This method offers the advantage that even small amyloid deposits, which are sometimes difficult to recognize in polarized light, can be visualized as an orange fluorescence. Table 2 shows the number of cases that stained positive for vitronectin for each amyloid type. Subsequently, we scored the extent of vitronectin immunostaining of the amyloid deposits into one of four categories: 0%, ≤10%, 11-90%, >90% of the amyloid area. For all AFib- and AApoAI amyloid cases, vitronectin immunostaining was seen to cover more than 90% of the amyloid area. This degree of coverage was less frequently observed for AA (85% of cases), ALκ (58%), ATTR (54%), Aβ (33%), ALλ (29%), Aβ2M (0%), AIns (0%) amyloid cases, indicating that some amyloid types tend to enclose vitronectin more extensively than others.

776

Winter et al. Winter et al.

Figure 2.  The presence of vitronectin within amyloid deposits is illustrated for several amyloid types: AA- and AFib amyloid both in kidney; ALλ- and ATTR amyloid in the large intestine; Aβ amyloid in brain; AIns amyloid in subcutaneous fat; Aβ2M amyloid in carpal tunnel ligament; and ALκ amyloid in liver. Congo red staining is observed with fluorescence microscopy, displaying amyloid deposits in orange. The case of AIns amyloid demonstrates that the distribution of vitronectin does not always cover the whole amyloid area. Scale, 80 µm.

Furthermore, grouping the cases according to the type of amyloid revealed that the amount of vitronectin in amyloid deposits varies not only with the amyloid type, but also within each group.

Discussion In our study, MALDI-MSI was used for the first time to identify the specific and spatial enrichment of vitronectin in amyloid deposits in four different cases (AApoAI, ALλ, ATTR, AIns). Our results were confirmed by immunohistochemistry in a validation cohort of 175 separate patients, including samples from 22 different histoanatomical locations and 9 different amyloid types. Thus, vitronectin is revealed as a common constituent of amyloid deposits. Using a significantly larger cohort, our finding confirms

and extends upon previous observations made by others: the presence of vitronectin has been reported for Aβ amyloid in the brain of 15 patients (Akiyama et al. 1991), for AL amyloid in neuropathy of 3 patients (Zanusso et al. 1992) and for renal AA- and AL-amyloidosis of 20 and 6 patients (Dahlbäck et al. 1987). Vitronectin is a multifunctional glycoprotein expressed in liver (Jenne et al. 1989; Seiffert et al. 1991), brain (Walker and McGeer 1998), retina (Anderson et al. 1999; Hageman et al. 1999; Ozaki et al. 1999) and vascular smooth muscle cells (Dufourcq et al. 1998). It appears in blood and in the ECM as an intact 75 kDa polypeptide or as two polypeptide chains (65 kDa and 10 kDa) linked by an intramolecular disulfide bridge (Hayman et al. 1983; Preissner 1991). Its amino acid sequence contributes 54 kDa to this molecular mass. Given that the primary structure contains multiple binding sites for other

777

Vitronectin: A Constituent of Amyloid Deposits Table 1.  Identification of Peptides in Amyloidogenic Human Liver Tissue. Protein

Mass (Da)

Vitronectin (P04004)

54271   36132

Apolipoprotein E (P02649) Serum amyloid P-component (P02743)

25371

Observed Peptide (m/z)

Mass Error (ppm)

Sequence Obtained by MS/MS Analysis

Residue (aa)

1314.682 1422.661 1646.815 948.526 968.553 1406.672

1.7 5.4 –1.6 0.3 0.9 1.2

RVDTVDPPYPR FEDGVLDPDYPR DVWGIEGPIDAAFTR LAVYQAGAR LGPLVEQGR AYSLFSYNTQGR

453–463 230–241 198–212 177–185 199–207 65–76

MOWSE Score 50 77 59 29 34 34    

List of peptide masses identified as tryptic peptides from vitronectin, apolipoprotein E and serum amyloid P-component following direct MALDI-MSMS on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded amyloidogenic liver tissue. Abbreviations: Da, Daltons; ppm, parts per million; MOWSE, MOlecular Weight SEarch; aa, amino acid.

Table 2.  Validation Cohort for 175 Amyloid Cases Investigated using Immunohistochemistry with Anti-Vitronectin. Vitronectin Immunostaining     AA amyloid AApoAI amyloid Aβ2M amyloid Aβ amyloid AFib amyloid AIns amyloid ALκ amyloid ALλ amyloid ATTR amyloid

Immunoscore (n, %)

No. of patients

Mean Age (range, years)

Male/ Female

No. of patients* (%)

0%

≤10%

11%–90%

>90%

20 1 8 9 9 11 40 38 39

58 (23–86) 68 62 (54–75) 67 (39–80) 57 (48–75) 58 (35–82) 69 (36–86) 66 (38–86) 76 (55–94)

12/8 0/1 5/3 5/4 8/1 7/4 19/21 26/12 25/14

20 (100) 1 (100) 8 (100) 8 (89) 9 (100) 11 (100) 39 (98) 36 (95) 38 (97)

0 0 0 1 (11) 0 0 1 (2) 2 (5) 1 (3)

1 (5) 0 4 (50) 3 (33) 0 9 (82) 8 (20) 11 (29) 2 (5)

2 (10) 0 4 (50) 2 (22) 0 2 (18) 8 (20) 14 (37) 15 (38)

17 (85) 1 (100) 0 3 (33) 9 (100) 0 23 (58) 11 (29) 21 (54)

Patient characteristics (number, age and sex) for samples of the different amyloid types, investigated by immunohistochemical analysis. The percentage of cases showing any positive staining for anti-vitronectin within the amyloid deposits ranged from 89% to 100% depending on the amyloid type. For each case and amyloid type, the percentage area of amyloid that showed positive immunostaining for vitronectin was scored (=immunoscore) and categorized into staining of 0%, ≤10%, 11-90%, >90% of the amyloid area. * Number of patients with an amount of positive immunostaining within amyloid deposits.

macromolecules, vitronectin is involved in several biological processes (Preissner 1991; Schvartz et al. 1999). For example, interaction of the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence with specific integrin receptors mediates the adhesion, spreading and migration of cells (Barnes et al. 1983; Basara et al. 1985; Cherny et al. 1993). Furthermore, association of vitronectin with components of the ECM is facilitated by a collagen-binding domain and a polycationic heparin-binding domain (Suzuki et al. 1984; Gebb et al. 1986; Ishikawa-Sakurai and Hayashi 1993). Because amyloid deposits are known to contain several components and proteins of the ECM (Röcken and Eriksson 2009), vitronectin may be another interesting ECM component involved in amyloid pathology. A study investigating the influence of ECM compounds on the expression of the β-amyloid precursor protein (APP) and its processing to amyloidogenic derivatives in fibroblasts showed that vitronectin increases the

amount of both species (Bronfman et al. 1996). This finding lends support to the hypothesis that the extracellular accumulation of vitronectin may precede the formation of amyloid. Vitronectin is able to form amyloid fibrils in vitro (Shin et al. 2008) and thereby may act as a nidus for the induction and acceleration of amyloid formation. A similar mechanism has been described by others, where the oral and intravenous administration of amyloid fibrils into a susceptible animal functions as an “amyloid-enhancing-factor” (Lundmark et al. 2002, 2005). However, as we did not observe vitronectin in every case, an opposite mechanism may also be possible: vitronectin is incorporated after primary accumulation of amyloid fibrils, where the amyloid fibril serves as a nidus for the accumulation of vitronectin. The observed varying amounts of vitronectin within amyloid deposits provides evidence that both ECM composition

778 and type of amyloid may affect the specific and spatial accumulation of vitronectin. This is because amyloids of systemic amyloidosis are exposed to different extracellular environments and amyloids originating from different precursor proteins possess dissimilar physico-chemical properties. In order to predict if and how vitronectin participates in amyloidogenesis, several essential questions have to be answered in future investigations: (1) What is the order of events: Do amyloid fibrils accumulate first or does vitronectin? (2) How do ECM composition and amyloid type affect vitronectin accumulation within the amyloid deposits? (3) Does the primary structure of vitronectin contain binding sites that would facilitate linkage to amyloidogenic polypeptides? These concerns aside, in this work, we demonstrated the potential of MALDI-MSI as a useful assisting tool for studying amyloid composition by revealing the co-localization of vitronectin, apolipoprotein E and serum amyloid P-component in AApoAI amyloid deposits. Furthermore, through immunohistochemistry, we show vitronectin to be a variable component of the matrix, with several different local and systemic amyloid types. The influence of vitronectin on the formation and aggregation of amyloid fibrils is still unclear and requires further investigations. Acknowledgments The authors thank Prasath Somasundaram and Dennis Linke for their technical assistance.

Declaration of Competing Interests The authors declared no potential competing interests with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Author Contributions Study concept and design was done by MW, AT, and CR. Clinical data were acquired by HS, surgical pathological data by SK and CR and mass spectra data by MW and AT. The data were analyzed and interpreted by MW, AT, SK and CR. Drafting of the manuscript and critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content was done by all authors. CR obtained funding. Administrative, technical, or material support was provided by AT, SK and CR. The study was supervised by AT and CR.

Funding The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This study was supported by grants of the Germany Research Foundation (Grant-No. Ro 1173/11) and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (GERAMY).

References Akiyama H, Kawamata T, Dedhar S, McGeer PL (1991). Immunohistochemical localization of vitronectin, its receptor and beta-3 integrin in Alzheimer brain tissue. J Neuroimmunol 32:19-28.

Winter et al. Winter et al. Anderson DH, Hageman GS, Mullins RF, Neitz M, Neitz J, Ozaki S, Preissner KT, Johnson LV (1999). Vitronectin gene expression in the adult human retina. Invest Ophthamol Vis Sci 40:3305-3315. Barnes DW, Silnutzer J, See C, Shaffer M (1983). Characterization of human serum spreading factor with monoclonal antibody. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 80:1362-1366. Basara ML, McCarthy JB, Barnes DW, Furcht LT (1985). Stimulation of haptotaxis and migration of tumor cells by serum spreading factor. Cancer Res 45:2487-2494. Bronfman FC, Soto C, Tapia L, Tapia V, Inestrosa NC (1996). Extracellular matrix regulates the amount of the β-amyloid precursor protein and its amyloidogenic fragments. J Cell Physiol 166:360-369. Cherny RC, Honan MA, Thiagarajan P (1993). Site-directed mutagenesis of the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid in vitronectin abolishes cell-adhesion. J Biol Chem 268:9725-9729. Chughtai K, Heeren RMA (2010). Mass spectrometric imaging for biomedical tissue analysis. Chem Rev 110:3237-3277. Dahlbäck K, Löfberg H, Dahlbäck B (1987). Immunohistochemical demonstration of vitronectin in association with elastin and amyloid deposits in human kidney. Histochemistry 87:511-515. Dufourcq P, Louis H, Moreau C, Daret D, Boisseau MR, Lamaziere JMD, Bonnet J (1998). Vitronectin expression and interaction with receptors in smooth muscle cells from human atheromatous plaque. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 18:168-176. Gebb C, Hayman EG, Engvall E, Ruoslahti E (1986). Interaction of vitronectin with collagen. J Biol Chem 261:6698-6703. Gioeva Z, Urban P, Meliss RR, Haag J, Axmann HD, Siebert F, Becker K, Radtke HG, Röcken C (2013). ATTR amyloid in the carpal tunnel ligament is frequently of wildtype transthyretin origin. Amyloid 20:1-6. Hageman GS, Mullins RF, Russell SR, Johnson LV, Anderson DH (1999). Vitronectin is a constituent of ocular drusen and the vitronectin gene is expressed in human retinal pigmented epithelial cells. FASEB J 13:477-484. Hayman EG, Pierschbacher MD, Öhgren Y, Ruoslahti E (1983). Serum spreading factor (vitronectin) is present at the cell surface and in tissues. Proc Nat Acad Sci U S A 80:4003-4007. Howie AJ, Brewer DB (2009). Optical properties of amyloid stained by Congo red: history and mechanisms. Micron 40:285-301. Howie AJ, Brewer DB, Howell D, Jones AP (2008). Physical basis of colors seen in Congo red-stained amyloid in polarized light. Lab Invest 88:232-242. Ishikawa-Sakurai M, Hayashi M (1993). Two collagen-binding domains of vitronectin. Cell Struct Funct 18:253-259. Jenne D, Hille A, Stanley KK, Huttner WB (1989). Sulfation of two tyrosine-residues in human complement S-protein (vitronectin). Eur J Biochem 185:391-395. Jones EA, Deininger SO, Hogendoorn PC, Deelder AM, McDonnell LA (2012). Imaging mass spectrometry statistical analysis. J Proteomics 75:4962-4989. Kebbel A, Röcken C (2006). Immunohistochemical classification of amyloid in surgical Pathology Revisited. Am J Surg Pathol 30:673-683. Klein CJ, Vrana JA, Theis JD, Dyck PJ, Dyck PJ, Spinner RJ, Mauermann ML, Bergen HR, 3rd, Zeldenrust SR, Dogan A (2011). Mass spectrometric-based proteomic Analysis of

Vitronectin: A Constituent of Amyloid Deposits amyloid neuropathy type in nerve tissue. Arch Neurol 68: 195-199. Lundmark K, Westermark GT, Nystrom S, Murphy CL, Solomon A, Westermark P (2002). Transmissibility of systemic amyloidosis by a prion-like mechanism. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99:6979-6984. Lundmark K, Westermark GT, Olsen A, Westermark P (2005). Protein fibrils in nature can enhance amyloid protein A amyloidosis in mice: Cross-seeding as a disease mechanism. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102:6098-6102. Merlini G, Bellotti V (2003). Molecular mechanisms of amyloidosis. N Engl J Med 349:583-596. Nasr SH, Said SM, Valeri AM, Sethi S, Fidler ME, Cornell LD, Gertz MA, Dispenzieri A, Buadi FK, Vrana JA, Theis JD, Dogan A, Leung N (2013). The diagnosis and characteristics of renal heavy-chain and heavy/light-chain amyloidosis and their comparison with renal light-chain amyloidosis. Kidney Int 83:463-470. Ozaki S, Johnson LV, Mullins RF, Hageman GS, Anderson DH (1999). The human retina and retinal pigment epithelium are abundant sources of vitronectin mRNA. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 258:524-529. Preissner KT (1991). Structure and biological role of vitronectin. Annu Rev Cell Biol 7:275-310. Pringle SD, Giles K, Wildgoose JL, Williams JP, Slade SE, Thalassinos K, Bateman RH, Bowers MT, Scrivens JH (2007). An investigation of the mobility separation of some peptide and protein ions using a new hybrid quadrupole/travelling wave IMS/oa-ToF instrument. Int J Mass Spectrom 261:1-12. Puchtler H, Sweat F, Levine M (1962). On the binding of Congo red by amyloid. J Histochem Cytochem 10:355-364. Röcken C, Eriksson M (2009). Amyloid and amyloidoses. Pathologe 30:182-192. Roden AC, Aubry MC, Zhang K, Brady JO, Levin D, Dogan A, Yi ES (2010). Nodular senile pulmonary amyloidosis: a unique case confirmed by immunohistochemistry, mass spectrometry, and genetic study. Hum Pathol 41:1040-1045. Rodriguez FJ, Gamez JD, Vrana JA, Theis JD, Giannini C, Scheithauer BW, Parisi JE, Lucchinetti CF, Pendlebury WW, Bergen HR, 3rd, Dogan A (2008). Immunoglobulin derived depositions in the nervous system: novel mass spectrometry application for protein characterization in formalin-fixed tissues. Lab Invest 88:1024-1037. Sachse C, Fandrich M, Grigorieff N (2008). Paired β-sheet structure of an Aβ(1-40) amyloid fibril revealed by electron microscopy. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105:7462-7466.

779 Schönland SO, Hegenbart U, Bochtler T, Mangatter A, Hansberg M, Ho AD, Lohse P, Röcken C (2012). Immunohistochemistry in the classification of systemic forms of amyloidosis: a systematic investigation of 117 patients. Blood 119:488-493. Schvartz I, Seger D, Shaltiel S (1999). Vitronectin. Int J Biochem Cell Biol 31:539-544. Seiffert D, Keeton M, Eguchi Y, Sawdey M, Loskutoff DJ (1991). Detection of vitronectin mRNA in tissues and cells of the mouse. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 88:9402-9406. Sethi S, Theis JD, Leung N, Dispenzieri A, Nasr SH, Fidler ME, Cornell LD, Gamez JD, Vrana JA, Dogan A (2010). Mass spectrometry-based proteomic diagnosis of renal immunoglobulin heavy chain amyloidosis. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 5:2180-2187. Sethi S, Vrana JA, Theis JD, Leung N, Sethi A, Nasr SH, Fervenza FC, Cornell LD, Fidler ME, Dogan A (2012). Laser microdissection and mass spectrometry-based proteomics aids the diagnosis and typing of renal amyloidosis. Kidney Int 82:226-234. Shin TM, Isas JM, Hsieh CL, Kayed R, Glabe CG, Langen R, Chen J (2008) Formation of soluble amyloid oligomers and amyloid fibrils by the multifunctional protein vitronectin. Mol Neurodegener 3:16. Sipe JD, Benson MD, Buxbaum JN, Ikeda S, Merlini G, Saraiva MJ, Westermark P (2014). Nomenclature 2014: Amyloid fibril proteins and clinical classification of the amyloidosis. Amyloid 21:221-224. Sunde M, Serpell LC, Bartlam M, Fraser PE, Pepys MB, Blake CCF (1997). Common core structure of amyloid fibrils by synchrotron X-ray diffraction. J Mol Biol 273:729-739. Suzuki S, Pierschbacher MD, Hayman EG, Nguyen K, Ohgren Y, Ruoslahti E (1984). Domain structure of vitronectin alignment of active sites. J Biol Chem 259:15307-15314. Vrana JA, Gamez JD, Madden BJ, Theis JD, Bergen HR, 3rd, Dogan A (2009). Classification of amyloidosis by laser microdissection and mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis in clinical biopsy specimens. Blood 114:4957-4959. Walker DG, McGeer PL (1998). Vitronectin expression in Purkinje cells in the human cerebellum. Neuroscience Letters 251:109-112. Yumlu S, Barany R, Eriksson M, Röcken C (2009). Localized insulin-derived amyloidosis in patients with diabetes mellitus: a case report. Hum Pathol 40:1655-1660. Zanusso GL, Moretto G, Bonetti B, Monaco S, Rizzuto N (1992). Complement neoantigen and vitronectin are components of plaques in amyloid AL neuropathy. Ital J Neurol Sci 13: 493-499.