| Literature DB >> 21603121 |
Mosmi Surati1, Matthew Robinson, Suvobroto Nandi, Leonardo Faoro, Carley Demchuk, Cleo E Rolle, Rajani Kanteti, Benjamin D Ferguson, Rifat Hasina, Tara C Gangadhar, April K Salama, Qudsia Arif, Colin Kirchner, Eneida Mendonca, Nicholas Campbell, Suwicha Limvorasak, Victoria Villaflor, Thomas A Hensing, Thomas Krausz, Everett E Vokes, Aliya N Husain, Mark K Ferguson, Theodore G Karrison, Ravi Salgia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years, there has been tremendous growth and interest in translational research, particularly in cancer biology. This area of study clearly establishes the connection between laboratory experimentation and practical human application. Though it is common for laboratory and clinical data regarding patient specimens to be maintained separately, the storage of such heterogeneous data in one database offers many benefits as it may facilitate more rapid accession of data and provide researchers access to greater numbers of tissue samples. DESCRIPTION: The Thoracic Oncology Program Database Project was developed to serve as a repository for well-annotated cancer specimen, clinical, genomic, and proteomic data obtained from tumor tissue studies. The TOPDP is not merely a library-it is a dynamic tool that may be used for data mining and exploratory analysis. Using the example of non-small cell lung cancer cases within the database, this study will demonstrate how clinical data may be combined with proteomic analyses of patient tissue samples in determining the functional relevance of protein over and under expression in this disease. Clinical data for 1323 patients with non-small cell lung cancer has been captured to date. Proteomic studies have been performed on tissue samples from 105 of these patients. These tissues have been analyzed for the expression of 33 different protein biomarkers using tissue microarrays. The expression of 15 potential biomarkers was found to be significantly higher in tumor versus matched normal tissue. Proteins belonging to the receptor tyrosine kinase family were particularly likely to be over expressed in tumor tissues. There was no difference in protein expression across various histologies or stages of non-small cell lung cancer. Though not differentially expressed between tumor and non-tumor tissues, the over expression of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) was associated improved overall survival. However, this finding is preliminary and warrants further investigation.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21603121 PMCID: PMC3164615 DOI: 10.1186/2043-9113-1-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Bioinforma ISSN: 2043-9113
Figure 1Thoracic Oncology Program Database Project schematic. Conceptual schematic depicting the multiple components contributing to the program.
Figure 2Tissue Microarray (TMA). In a TMA, cores of tumor and adjacent normal tissue are removed from tissue embedded in paraffin blocks. Cores are arranged in an array and slices are stained using antibodies to assess the expression of proteins of interest.
Source of Antibodies
| Antibody | Vendor |
|---|---|
| c-Met | Zymed |
| p-Met 1003 | Biosource |
| p-Met 1349 | Biosource |
| p-Met 1365 | Biosource |
| p-Met Triple | Biosource |
| HGF | R&D systems |
| Ronβ | Santa Crutz |
| p-Ronβ | Santa Crutz |
| Her3 | Santa Crutz |
| EphA2 | Santa Crutz |
| EphB4 | Vasgen Therapeutics |
| Fibronectin | DAKO |
| β-catenin | Zymed |
| E-cadherin | Zymed |
| EzH2 | Zymed |
| Snail | AVIVA Systems Biology |
| Vimentin | DAKO |
| Paxillin | Salgia Lab |
| GR | Novocastra |
| ERβ | Biogenex |
| PKCB-β1 | Santa Crutz |
| PKCB-β2 | GeneTex |
Antibodies were purchased from the listed manufacturers.
Protein Functional Families
| RTK | EMT | NonRTK | PK | HM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Met | β-catenin | ER | PKC-β1 | EzH2 |
| Ron | E-cadherin | GR | PKC-β2 | |
| EphA2 | Fibronectin | |||
| EphB4 | Snail | |||
| Her3 | Vimentin | |||
| HGF | Paxillin |
Proteins captured in the database were grouped by their functional families: Receptor Tyrosine Kinase (RTK), Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition (EMT), Non-receptor Tyrosine Kinase (NonRTK), Protein Kinase (PK), and Histone Modifier (HM).
Patient Demographics
| Number of Cases (%)* | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Entire Database | TMA only | Heat map only | |
| Male | 688 (52) | 63 (60) | 46 (60) |
| Female | 635 (48) | 42 (40) | 31 (40) |
| Caucasian | 587 (44) | 63 (60) | 51 (66) |
| African American | 377 (28) | 34 (32) | 23 (30) |
| Other | 38 (3) | 2 (2) | 3 (4) |
| Non-Specified | 321 (24) | 6 (6) | n/a |
| Adenocarcinoma | 603 (46) | 58 (55) | 51 (66) |
| Large Cell Carcinoma | 75 (6) | 18 (17) | 15 (19) |
| Squamous Cell Carcinoma | 338 (26) | 15 (14) | 11 (14) |
| NSCLC Non-Specified | 307 (23) | 14 (13) | n/a |
| I | 379 (29) | 49 (47) | 37 (48) |
| II | 123 (9) | 12 (11) | 8 (10) |
| III | 261 (20) | 32 (30) | 27 (35) |
| IV | 173 (13) | 6 (6) | 5 (6) |
| Non-Specified | 384 (29) | 6 (6) | n/a |
| Alive | 537 (41) | 32 (30) | 24 (31) |
| Deceased | 452 (34) | 71 (68) | 53 (69) |
| Unknown | 334 (25) | 2 (2) | n/a |
| 64 years | 61 years | 61 years | |
| 17 months | 16 months | 17 months | |
*Due to rounding, percentages may not sum to 100.
To date, 1323 NSCLC patients have been captured in the database. A subset of these have TMA data (n = 105) and a further subset of patients were included in the heat map analysis.
Comparison of Protein Expression between Tumor and Normal Tissue
| Tumor > Normal | Normal > Tumor | Tumor = Normal |
|---|---|---|
| GR | ||
| ER β | ||
Protein expression was compared between tumors and matched control tissue. Certain proteins were found to differentially expressed, while others were not. These differences were statistically significant. Proteins are organized by functional families represented by different fonts.
Figure 3Heat map based on tumor histology. Averaged tumor protein expression values for given proteins are stratified by tumor histology: adenocarcinoma (AC), squamous cell carcinoma (SqCC), and large cell carcinoma (LCC).
Figure 4Heat map based on tumor stage. Averaged tumor protein expression values for selected proteins are stratified by tumor stage at diagnosis.
Figure 5Kaplan Meier Survival Curve for GR. Survival curves were dichotomized on the median expression value of the Glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Higher expression of GR was associated with greater overall survival. Tick marks represent censored data points.