| Literature DB >> 20567502 |
Ebbing P de Jong1, Hongwei Xie, Getiria Onsongo, Matthew D Stone, Xiao-Bing Chen, Joel A Kooren, Eric W Refsland, Robert J Griffin, Frank G Ondrey, Baolin Wu, Chap T Le, Nelson L Rhodus, John V Carlis, Timothy J Griffin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oral cancer survival rates increase significantly when it is detected and treated early. Unfortunately, clinicians now lack tests which easily and reliably distinguish pre-malignant oral lesions from those already transitioned to malignancy. A test for proteins, ones found in non-invasively-collected whole saliva and whose abundances distinguish these lesion types, would meet this critical need. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20567502 PMCID: PMC2887353 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Biomarker discovery strategy.
The parts making up our integrated strategy are shown and described in the text.
Figure 2Bioinformatic analysis of differentially abundant proteins.
A. Significantly represented pathways of differentially abundant proteins compared to control proteins (those showing no abundance differences) grouped by IPA. Pathways with bars rising above the significance threshold are those containing sufficiently high numbers of proteins from our proteomic data such that they are deemed highly represented in a statistically significant manner (See Materials and Methods for details on significance calculations). Numerical values in parentheses for each pathway are the total number of proteins in the Ingenuity Pathway database mapping to that pathway. B. A significantly represented protein network (P = 1×10−35) determined by IPA on differentially abundant soluble saliva proteins. Myosin subunits and actins are highly represented in this network and shaded in black. Other differentially abundant proteins identified in our proteomics study are shaded in gray; proteins not identified in our proteomics study are not shaded.
Figure 3Summary of western blot validation results.
Box plots of actin and myosin western blot data in soluble saliva (panels A and B, mean of twelve samples tested in each subject group; the ratio for each sample being the mean of three technical replicates) and exfoliated cells in the same saliva samples (panels C and D, mean of twelve samples tested in each subject group). Each plot displays the median (solid horizontal line within each box), quartiles (area if each box), and range of the data (bars extending from each box). Western blots were performed for actin (A, C) and myosin (B, D).