| Literature DB >> 25224486 |
Christophe Couderc1, Julien Bollard1, Yohann Couté2, Patrick Massoma1, Gilles Poncet3, Florian Lepinasse4, Valérie Hervieu5, Nicolas Gadot6, Jean-Charles Sanchez7, Jean-Yves Scoazec8, Jean-Jacques Diaz9, Colette Roche10.
Abstract
Small-intestinal neuroendocrine tumors (SI-NETs) are defined as locally invasive only after extension to the muscularis propria. To gain further insight into the molecular mechanisms, we applied a proteomic approach to an orthotopic xenograft model to identify candidate proteins evaluable in human SI-NETs. After grafting STC-1 neuroendocrine tumor cells on the caecum of nude mice, comparative proteomic studies were performed between the pre-invasive and the invasive stages, respectively 2 and 8 weeks after grafting. We identified 24 proteins displaying at least a 1.5-fold differential expression between 2 and 8 week-stages. Most were cytoskeleton-associated proteins, among which five showed decreasing expression levels (CRMP2, TCP1ε, TPM2, vimentin, desmin) and two increasing expression levels (14-3-3γ, CK8). Changes for CRMP2, TCP1ε, TPM2 and 14-3-3γ were confirmed in experimental tumors and in a series of 28 human SI-NETs. In conclusion, our results underline the relevance of proteomics to identify novel biomarkers of tissue invasion.Entities:
Keywords: Cytoskeleton; GEP-NETs; Local invasion; Proteomic; Spectrometry
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25224486 DOI: 10.1016/j.mce.2014.09.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Endocrinol ISSN: 0303-7207 Impact factor: 4.102