| Literature DB >> 24708694 |
Daniel Ansari, Linus Aronsson, Agata Sasor, Charlotte Welinder, Melinda Rezeli, György Marko-Varga, Roland Andersson1.
Abstract
In the post-genomic era, it has become evident that genetic changes alone are not sufficient to understand most disease processes including pancreatic cancer. Genome sequencing has revealed a complex set of genetic alterations in pancreatic cancer such as point mutations, chromosomal losses, gene amplifications and telomere shortening that drive cancerous growth through specific signaling pathways. Proteome-based approaches are important complements to genomic data and provide crucial information of the target driver molecules and their post-translational modifications. By applying quantitative mass spectrometry, this is an alternative way to identify biomarkers for early diagnosis and personalized medicine. We review the current quantitative mass spectrometric technologies and analyses that have been developed and applied in the last decade in the context of pancreatic cancer. Examples of candidate biomarkers that have been identified from these pancreas studies include among others, asporin, CD9, CXC chemokine ligand 7, fibronectin 1, galectin-1, gelsolin, intercellular adhesion molecule 1, insulin-like growth factor binding protein 2, metalloproteinase inhibitor 1, stromal cell derived factor 4, and transforming growth factor beta-induced protein. Many of these proteins are involved in various steps in pancreatic tumor progression including cell proliferation, adhesion, migration, invasion, metastasis, immune response and angiogenesis. These new protein candidates may provide essential information for the development of protein diagnostics and targeted therapies. We further argue that new strategies must be advanced and established for the integration of proteomic, transcriptomic and genomic data, in order to enhance biomarker translation. Large scale studies with meta data processing will pave the way for novel and unexpected correlations within pancreatic cancer, that will benefit the patient, with targeted treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24708694 PMCID: PMC3998064 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-12-87
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Protein deep mining studies in pancreatic cancer using mass spectrometry
| Label-free | Tissue | PC, N | 1,009 proteins in total; 422 upregulated proteins in PC | ASPN, LTBP2, TGFBI | Turtoi et al. [ |
| | Tissue | PC, N | 1,229 proteins in total; 499 upregulated in PC | ECH1, GLUT1 (GTR1), OLFM4, STML2 | Takadate et al. [ |
| | Tissue | PC, CP, N | 525 proteins in total; 21 upregulated proteins in PC | ANXA4, FN1 | Paulo et al. [ |
| | Plasma | PC, N | 53,009 MS peaks | CXCL7 | Matsubara et al. [ |
| SILAC | Cell lines | PC, N | 195 proteins in total; 68 upregulated proteins in PC; 5 biomarker candidates validated in pancreatic cancer tissue | CD9, HSPG2, APOE, SDF4, ITGB1 | Grønborg et al. [ |
| | Serum | PC, N | 1,065 proteins in total; 121 upregulated proteins in PC | BCAM, ICAM1 | Yu et al. [ 94] |
| ICAT | Tissue | PC, N | 656 proteins in total; 151 upregulated proteins in PC | ANXA2, ITGB1 | Chen et al. [ |
| | Pancreatic juice | PC, N | 105 proteins in total; 30 upregulated proteins in PC | IGFBP2 | Chen et al. [ |
| Acrylamide- labeling | Plasma | PC, CP, N | 1,340 proteins in total; 95 and 87 proteins with ≥1.5 fold difference in PC compared to N and CP, respectively | ICAM1, TIMP1 | Pan et al. [ |
| TMT | Serum | PC, N | 752 proteins in total | APOA4, F12, GSN, LTF | Sinclair et al. [ |
| ICAT, iTRAQ | Tissue | PanIN-3, PC, CP, N | 770 proteins in total; 70 proteins upregulated and 133 downregulated in PanIN-3 | ACTN4, LAMB1, LGALS1 | Pan et al. [ |
ACTN4, actinin alpha-4; ANXA2, annexin A2; ANXA4, annexin A4; APOE, apolipoprotein E; APOA4, apolipoprotein A-IV; ASPN, asporin; BCAM, basal cell adhesion molecule; CP, chronic pancreatitis; CXCL7, CXC chemokine ligand 7; ECH1, enoyl CoA hydratase 1; F12, coagulation factor XII; FN1, fibronectin 1; GLUT1 (GTR1), glucose transporter member 1; GSN, gelsolin; HSPG2, heparan sulfate proteoglycan 2 (perlecan); ICAM1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1; IGFB2, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 2; ITGB1, integrin beta-1; LAMB1, laminin beta-1; LGALS1, galectin-1; LTBP2, latent transforming growth factor beta binding 2; LTF, lactotransferrin; N, normal; OLFM4, olfactomedin-4; PanIN-3, pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia; PC, pancreatic cancer; SDF4, stromal cell derived factor 4; STML2, stomatin-like protein 2; TGFBI, transforming growth factor beta-induced; TIMP1, metalloproteinase inhibitor 1.
Figure 1Protein assay development in pancreatic cancer from discovery to validation.
Figure 2Workflow for biomarker translation in pancreatic cancer using large-scale processing.