| Literature DB >> 21342498 |
Sandra Kraljevic Pavelic1, Mirela Sedic, Hrvojka Bosnjak, Sime Spaventi, Kresimir Pavelic.
Abstract
Many hypotheses have been postulated to explain the intricate nature of the metastatic process, but none of them completely accounted for the actual biological and clinical observations. Consequently, metastasis still remains an open issue with only few metastasis-inducing proteins experimentally validated so far. Recently proposed novel metastatic model, where serial and parallel metastatic processes are adequately integrated, might help to bridge the current gap between experimental results and clinical observations. In addition, the identification, isolation and molecular characterization of cancer stem cells, a population of the cells within the tumour mass able to proliferate, self-renew and induce tumorigenesis, will shed new light on the complex molecular events mediating metastasis, invasion and resistance to therapy. Understanding the molecular basis of these tumour characteristics will usher in a new age of individualized cancer therapy. In this review article, we will provide a current overview of molecular mechanisms underpinning metastasis, and discuss recent findings in this field obtained by global molecular profiling strategies such as proteomics.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21342498 PMCID: PMC3052211 DOI: 10.1186/1476-4598-10-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Figure 1The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) occurs at the primary tumour site where epithelial cells lose tight junctions and apico-basal polarity. The remodelling of the cytoskeleton occurs as well. The invasion process through the extracellular matrix (ECM) is frequently led by so called tumour-associated fibroblasts. EMT can induce stem-cell-like properties in cells. The question still remains whether the existing cancer stem cells or rather those cells that escaped the primary tumour and acquired the stem cell like phenotype through the EMT process induce distant metastasis.
Overview of the most common proteomics technologies in the research of tumour invasion and metastasis
| Proteomics method | Abbreviation | Basic principle | Biological Application | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis | 2-DE | Proteins are first resolved by their isoelectric points, and then by molecular weights | Separation of proteins in complex biological samples | High resolution Very sensitive | Limited automation |
| Two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis | 2D-DIGE | Samples are labelled with two spectrally distinct fluorescent cyanine dyes, and run on the same 2-DE gel; the two gel images corresponding to each dye scan are then overlaid, and the intensities of paired spots are compared across the gel images | Quantification of the differences in protein expression between different samples | High sensitivity | Expensive fluorophores, equipment and software |
| Matrix assisted laser desorption ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry | MALDI-TOF MS | Tryptic digests of sample proteins are co-crystallized with matrix, and spotted onto MALDI plate; ionization occurs by pulsed laser radiation primarily absorbed by the matrix, causing desorption and ionization of the analyte; the resulting peptide ions are directed into TOF mass analyzer, where peptide masses are measured by determining the time required for the ions to traverse the length of the flight tube and reach detector | Protein identification | Produces less raw data than other MS techniques | Requires previous separation of protein mixture |
| Multidimensional protein identification technology | MudPIT | Mixture of tryptic peptides is resolved by the microcapillary column packed with reversed-phase resin followed by strong cation exchange resin; peptides are eluted directly from the column into the mass spectrometer to be rapidly analyzed | Large-scale protein analysis of complex biological mixtures | Detects proteins of wide range of pI, abundance and sub-cellular distribution | Time-consuming Requires experienced personnel Does not detect protein activity nor interactions Limited throughput Generates the vast stream of raw data |
| Surface enhanced laser desorption and ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ProteinChip Technology) | SELDI-TOF MS | Protein solutions are applied to the spots of ProteinChip Arrays that contain either chemically (anionic, cationic, hydrophobic, hydrophilic, or metal ion) or biochemically (immobilized antibody, receptor, DNA, enzyme, etc.) active surface retaining proteins according to their specific physicochemical properties; after adding matrix solution to bound proteins, the latter are ionized with nitrogen laser and their molecular masses measured by TOF mass analyzer. As a result, unique protein abundance profiles of species bound to the chip surface are obtained. | Biomarker discovery | Suitable for crude biological samples (body fluids, cells) | Additional MS analysis needed for determining the identity of differentially expressed protein species |
| Isotope-coded affinity tags | ICAT | Two different protein samples are labelled at cysteines with the isotopically light and heavy ICAT reagents, combined and digested with trypsin; ICAT-labeled peptides are isolated by avidin affinity chromatography and analyzed by HPLC coupled to a tandem mass spectrometer; the ratio of ion intensities from co-eluting ICAT-labeled pairs permits the quantification, while a subsequent | Sequence identification and quantification of proteins in complex mixtures | Selects only cysteine-containing peptides and thus effectively reduces the complexity of the peptide mixtures | Incomplete proteome coverage (10-20% of the whole cell proteome) |
| Laser-capture microdisscetion | LCM | A stained tissue slide is placed under a microscope, and a specific thermoplastic polymer film is placed over the tissue; the cells of interest are shot by an infrared laser pulse, which melts and fuses the film around the targeted cells; the cells embedded in the polymer are lifted away from the remaining tissue | Isolation of pure cell populations from heterogeneous tissue sections prior to proteomic analyses focused on the investigation of novel biomarkers and drug targets | High-throughput | Requires competency in identifying the cells of interest |
| Reverse-phase protein microarrays | RPMA | Cell lysates are arrayed on nitrocellulose-coated glass slides binding denatured proteins; the slide is probed with a single antibody specific for an antigen of interest; upon signal development and imaging, the relative proportion of the analyte protein molecules can be compared between test samples on the array | Functional mapping of known cell-signalling networks or pathways | High-throughput | The lack of availability of high-quality, specific antibodies |
Representative cell surface markers for human cancer stem cells
| Type of cancer stem cells | Cell surface markers |
|---|---|
| Acute myelogenous leukemia; | CD34+, CD38-, CD44, CD123+ |
| Chronic myeloid leukemia | CD34+, CD38-, CD123+ |
| B-acute lymphogenous leukemia | CD34+, CD38-, CD19+ |
| Ph1-acute lymphogenous leukemia | CD34+, CD38- |
| Blast-crisis CML | CD34+, CD38+, CD123+ |
| Myeloproliferative disorder | CD117+ |
| Glioblastoma | CD133+ |
| Medulloblastoma | CD133+ |
| Pilocytic astrocytoma | CD133+ |
| Anaplastic ependymoma | CD133+ |
| Breast | CD44+, CD24-/low, ESA+ |
| Prostate | CD133+/alpha 2 beta 1 integrin/CD44+ CD44+/CD24- |
| Ovarian cancer | CD44+, MyD88+ |
| Colon cancer | CD133+, CD44+, CD166+, E-CAMhig |
| Pancreatic cancer | CD133+, CD44+, CD24+ |
| Hepatocellular cancer | CD133+ |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | CD44+ |
| Bone sarcomas | Stro-1+, CD105+, CD44+ |
| Melanoma | CD20+, CD133+ |
| Lung cancer | CD133+ |
| Liver | CD133+, CD90+ |
| Central nervous system | CD133+ |