Literature DB >> 29128960

A Proteomics Analysis Reveals 9 Up-Regulated Proteins Associated with Altered Cell Signaling in Colon Cancer Patients.

Oleg I Kit1, Dmitry I Vodolazhsky1, Denis S Kutilin1, Yaroslav S Enin1, Yury A Gevorkyan1, Peter V Zolotukhin2, Yanis Boumber3, Leonid V Kharin1, Svetlana B Panina4.   

Abstract

Colorectal cancer is the second most common cancer in women and third most common cancer in men. Cell signaling alterations in colon cancer, especially in aggressive metastatic tumors, require further investigations. The present study aims to compare the expression pattern of proteins associated with cell signaling in paired tumor and non-tumor samples of patients with colon cancer, as well as to define the cluster of proteins to differentiate patients with non-metastatic (Dukes' grade B) and metastatic (Dukes' grade C&D) colon cancer. Frozen tumor and non-tumor samples were collected after tumor resection from 19 patients with colon cancer. The Panorama™ Antibody Microarray-Cell Signaling kits were used for the analyses. The expression ratios of paired tumor/non-tumor samples were calculated for the each protein. We employed R packages 'samr', 'gplots', 'supclust' (pelora, wilma algorithms), 'glmnet' for the differential expression analysis, supervised clustering and penalized logistic regression. Significance analysis of microarrays revealed 9 significantly up-regulated proteins, including protein kinase C gamma, c-Myc, MDM2, pan cytokeratin, and 1 significantly down-regulated protein (GAP1) in tumoral mucosa. Pan-cytokeratin and APP were up-regulated in tumor versus non-tumor tissue, and were selected in the predictive cluster to discriminate colon cancer type. Higher levels of S-100b and phospho-Tau-pSer199/202 were confirmed as the predictors of non-metastatic colon cancer by all employed regression/clustering methods. Deregulated proteins in colon cancer are involved in oncogenic signal transduction, cell cycle control, and regulation of cytoskeleton/transport. Further studies are needed to validate potential protein markers of colon cancer development and metastatic progression.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biomarkers; Cell signaling; Colon cancer; Metastasis; Proteome

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29128960     DOI: 10.1007/s10930-017-9746-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Protein J        ISSN: 1572-3887            Impact factor:   2.371


  42 in total

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8.  Molecular Genetics of Colorectal Cancer: An Overview.

Authors:  Irfan M Hisamuddin; Vincent W Yang
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Review 9.  Proteomics for discovery of candidate colorectal cancer biomarkers.

Authors:  Paula Alvarez-Chaver; Olalla Otero-Estévez; María Páez de la Cadena; Francisco J Rodríguez-Berrocal; Vicenta S Martínez-Zorzano
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Authors:  Mengnan Zhang; Feng Ma; Ruyi Xie; Yao Wu; Meiyan Wu; Pei Zhang; Ying Peng; Jinjun Zhao; Jing Xiong; Aimin Li; Cheng Kequan; Yali Zhang; Side Liu; Jide Wang; Xueqing Chen
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2017-04-05       Impact factor: 5.650

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2.  Gene expression profile analysis of colon cancer grade II into grade III transition by using system biology.

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Review 3.  CK1 Is a Druggable Regulator of Microtubule Dynamics and Microtubule-Associated Processes.

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