Abstract
To evaluate the sAA proteoforms' expression during different stimulation situations. This study evaluated the salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) proteoforms' behavior by western blot (WB) analysis and high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) in different situations that produce increases in sAA activity. For this purpose, six healthy women with a similar body mass index, age, and fit, underwent different sAA stimulation tests, such as acetic acid stimulation, psychological stress using the standardized Trier social stress test, and physical effort using the Cooper treadmill test. The three models showed an increase in sAA activity. The WB demonstrated seven common bands observed in the six women (band one at 59kDa, two at 56kDa, three at 48kDa, four at 45kDa, five at 41kDa, six at 36kDa, and seven at 14kDa), in which sAA protein was identified. The individual WB analysis showed that band two, which corresponded to the native non-glycosylated sAA proteoform, had a higher increase after the three sAA stimulation inducers, and this band was also the only proteoform correlated with sAA activity (r = 0.56, P = 0.001). In addition, when the label-free quantification analysis was performed, the different proteoforms showed different responses depending on the type of stimulation. This preliminary study showed that the diverse sAA proteoforms' expression depends on the different stimulation models. This study opens new perspectives and challenges for the use of the different alpha-amylase proteoforms as possible biomarkers in addition to the sAA activity.
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