| Literature DB >> 19291297 |
Linan Shi1,2, Jun Zhang3, Peng Wu1, Kai Feng3, Jing Li1,2, Zhensheng Xie1, Peng Xue1, Tanxi Cai1, Ziyou Cui1,2, Xiulan Chen1,2, Junjie Hou1,2, Jianzhong Zhang3, Fuquan Yang1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a common form of cancer in children. Currently, bone marrow biopsy is used for diagnosis. Noninvasive biomarkers for the early diagnosis of pediatric ALL are urgently needed. The aim of this study was to discover potential protein biomarkers for pediatric ALL.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19291297 PMCID: PMC2662805 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5956-7-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Age and sexual distribution of all study subjects in the SELDI-TOF-MS experiments
| Age (years) | Gender | total | Training set | Test set | |||||
| 0–3 | 4–6 | 7–10 | 11–14 | M (%) | F (%) | ||||
| ALL patients (M*/F**) | 8/5 | 25/12 | 25/12 | 4/3 | 66.0% | 34.0% | 94 | 45 | 49 |
| Healthy controls (M/F) | 5/3 | 15/7 | 13/6 | 3/2 | 66.7% | 33.3% | 54 | 34 | 20 |
| AML patients (M/F) | 3/2 | 8/5 | 7/3 | 1/1 | 63.3% | 36.7% | 30 | 30 | |
| Total | 16/10 | 48/24 | 45/21 | 8/6 | 65.7% | 34.3% | 178 | 79 | 99 |
M*: Male, F**: Female.
The average peak intensity of proteins found in the sera of pediatric ALL patients.
| m/z | Children with ALL | Healthy children | p value | ||
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | ||
| 9290.355 | 9.730 | 5.685 | 18.405 | 5.858 | 7.19E-08 |
| 7768.866 | 9.912 | 6.651 | 20.817 | 8.488 | 1.54E-07 |
| 15108.479 | 1.372 | 2.172 | 4.166 | 4.963 | 4.91E-07 |
| 7565.087 | 2.059 | 3.169 | 6.044 | 6.228 | 2.21E-06 |
| 4473.963 | 10.652 | 6.843 | 5.248 | 2.698 | 2.57E-05 |
| 8936.734 | 18.490 | 14.282 | 6.568 | 3.907 | 5.13E-05 |
| 8137.299 | 19.247 | 17.181 | 4.160 | 3.109 | 5.35E-05 |
| 28011.161 | 0.372 | 0.229 | 0.518 | 0.223 | 4.56E-04 |
| 15850.461 | 1.338 | 1.560 | 2.452 | 2.713 | 5.91E-04 |
| 5637.825 | 15.612 | 9.664 | 25.800 | 14.650 | 8.78E-04 |
| 4070.961 | 7.856 | 6.540 | 3.095 | 3.291 | 1.38E-03 |
| 3220.724 | 4.879 | 3.041 | 6.831 | 2.563 | 1.53E-03 |
| 4349.558 | 13.206 | 6.407 | 17.579 | 5.704 | 2.53E-03 |
| 6434.393 | 25.869 | 12.180 | 32.709 | 8.287 | 3.38E-03 |
| 23416.789 | 0.450 | 0.251 | 0.603 | 0.272 | 5.56E-03 |
| 4095.034 | 40.820 | 19.852 | 54.436 | 16.976 | 5.91E-03 |
| 2045.834 | 9.700 | 3.396 | 12.768 | 5.107 | 7.08E-03 |
| 7954.897 | 1.713 | 1.242 | 2.584 | 1.890 | 1.00E-02 |
| 2068.902 | 4.773 | 2.398 | 6.868 | 4.203 | 1.29E-02 |
| 2758.988 | 4.654 | 3.663 | 6.351 | 3.866 | 1.61E-02 |
| 4117.262 | 11.073 | 7.452 | 14.543 | 5.564 | 1.70E-02 |
| 5906.757 | 10.203 | 9.880 | 15.548 | 11.738 | 2.66E-02 |
| 8689.917 | 39.521 | 13.873 | 46.393 | 11.731 | 2.79E-02 |
| 4139.322 | 9.727 | 5.229 | 12.083 | 4.372 | 3.67E-02 |
| 6855.835 | 6.737 | 2.966 | 5.535 | 2.367 | 4.34E-02 |
| 8562.074 | 20.170 | 11.250 | 23.342 | 7.977 | 4.99E-02 |
Figure 1Representative mapping of SELDI-TOF-MS analysis of sera from healthy controls and pediatric ALL patients. Differentially expressed proteins with potential diagnostic significance are indicated by arrows. The top group denotes serum from a healthy volunteer, in which 7769 m/z and 9290 m/z were up-regulated. The bottom group denotes sera from patients with ALL, in which 8137 m/z and 8937 m/z were over-expressed.
Figure 2Diagram of the classification tree for pediatric ALL patients and healthy controls.
Figure 3MALDI-TOF-MS spectra of four purified potential protein markers.
Figure 4Results of the identification of protein (9290 m/z) by LC-MS/MS. (A) Chromatogram of peptide mixture; (B, C) MS/MS spectra of two peptides.
Identification of the four potential protein biomarkers with identified peptides and covered sequences.
| Sequence* | |||
| 9290 | CTAP-III | K.RNLAKGKEESLDSDLYAELR.C | |
| K.GKEESLDSDLYAEL.R | |||
| L.AKGKEESLDSDLYAELR.C | |||
| K.GKEESLDSDLYAELR.C | |||
| C.NQVEVIATLKDGRKICLDPDAPRIK.K | |||
| R.NLAKGKEESLDSDLYAELR.C | |||
| K.LAGDESAD.- | |||
| 7769 | PF4 | T.SQVRPRHITSL.E | eaeedgdlqclcvktt |
| T.SLEVIKAGPHCPTAQ.L | |||
| C.LDLQAPLYKKIIK.K | |||
| L.EVIKAGPHCPTAQ.L | |||
| L.DLQAPLYKKIIK.K | |||
| A.GPHCPTAQLIATLK.N | |||
| L.QAPLYKKIIKKLLES.- | |||
| 8137 | C3a | R.SVQLTEKRMDKVGKYPKELRKC.C | |
| E.ACKKVFLDCC.N | |||
| L.GEACKKVFLDCC.N | |||
| C.CEDGMRENPMRFSCQ.R | |||
| L.GEACKKVFLDCCNYITELRRQHA.R | |||
| 8937 | C3a | R.SVQLTEKRMDKVGKYPKELRKC.C | |
| E.KRMDKVGKYPKELRKC.C | |||
| C.CEDGMRENPMRFSCQ.R | |||
| L.GEACKKVFLDCC.N | |||
| T.EKRMDKVGKYPKELRKC.C | |||
| L.GEACKKVFLDCCNYITELRRQ.H | |||
*: Underlined and bold letters show the sequences corresponding to the identified peptides.
Figure 5Validation of four potential protein markers by SELDI immunoaffinity assay. A: CTAP-III; B: PF4; C: fragments of C3a.