| Literature DB >> 35168611 |
Zhiyong Ding1, Nan Wang2, Ning Ji3,4, Zhe-Sheng Chen5.
Abstract
Alterations in DNAs could not reveal what happened in proteins. The accumulated alterations of DNAs would change the manifestation of proteins. Therefore, as is the case in cancer liquid biopsies, deep proteome profiling will likely provide invaluable and clinically relevant information in real-time throughout all stages of cancer progression. However, due to the great complexity of proteomes in liquid biopsy samples and the limitations of proteomic technologies compared to high-plex sequencing technologies, proteomic discoveries have yet lagged behind their counterpart, genomic technologies. Therefore, novel protein technologies are in urgent demand to fulfill the goals set out for biomarker discovery in cancer liquid biopsies.Notably, conventional and innovative technologies are being rapidly developed for proteomic analysis in cancer liquid biopsies. These advances have greatly facilitated early detection, diagnosis, prognosis, and monitoring of cancer evolution, adapted or adopted in response to therapeutic interventions. In this paper, we review the high-plex proteomics technologies that are capable of measuring at least hundreds of proteins simultaneously from liquid biopsy samples, ranging from traditional technologies based on mass spectrometry (MS) and antibody/antigen arrays to innovative technologies based on aptamer, proximity extension assay (PEA), and reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA).Entities:
Keywords: Antibody arrays; Aptamer; Cancer liquid biopsy; Mass spectrometry (MS); Proteomics; Proximity extension assay (PEA); Reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35168611 PMCID: PMC8845389 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-022-01526-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Overview of proteomics technologies in cancer liquid biopsies. The inner ring (blue) in the left panel describes the origins of all types of body fluids (Blood, urine, stool, seminal fluid, cervical fluid, ascites, bone marrow, pleural effusion, saliva, CSF, sputum, lymphatic fluid, and sweat). The outer ring is two-colored denoting non-protein (yellow) and sources of protein molecules (red) that are potential biomarkers of interest, the latter of which is further connected with discovery proteomics technologies with demographic principles (right green panel). Those technologies include mass spectrometry, reverse phase protein array, antibody arrays/antigen arrays/beads arrays, proximity extension assay, and aptamer assay and are discussed in this review
Key application features of proteomics technologies for cancer liquid biopsies
| Basic principles | Typical multi-plexity | Typical sample throughput (per assay) | Limit of Detection/ | Readout | De-novo/ | Laboratory procedures | Advantages | Limitations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samples are prepared according to specific purposes, followed by digestion, peptide ionization, and tandem MS scans. | ~ 6500 (Urine) ~ 1500 (blood) | Up to 16 (TMT labelling) | Picogram/ 4-5 logs | Fragmented peptide sequences and spectrum counting | De-novo/ Targeted | Heavy instrumentation and non-standardized workflows for pre-MS sample preparation Semi-automated | De-novo process suitable for exploratory research | Low throughput, Complex depletion process, limitations to analyze protein PTMs | |
| Antibodies/Antigens immobilized onto the solid substrates. Targets proteins in samples captured by the antibodies/antigens. | ~ 4000 (antibody arrays)/ up ~ 21,000 (antigen arrays) | ~ 1-64 | Low picogram/ 5 logs | Colorimetric assays or fluorescence | Targeted | Standardized workflows, Semi-automated | Widely adopted approach with flexible experimental design and PTM profiling. | Limit on inter-assay reproducibility and quantification, inter-assay variation, Sample labelling | |
| Short single-strand DNA or RNA fold into specific tertiary structures with the ability to bind targets with high affinity and specificity. | ~ 7000 | Up to 1000 | Low picogram/ 4-5 logs | DNA microarray/ fluorescence | Targeted | Standardized workflows performed at service centers, Semi-automated | High-plexity | Limit on protein PTMs detection; Dependence on DNA microarray for readout | |
| Sandwich ELISA labeled with complementary DNA oligos binds to the target allowing the oligos to hybridized. | ~ 3000 | 88 | Low picogram to femtogram/ 10 logs | qPCR (medium-plex) or NGS (high-plex) | Targeted | Standardized workflows with Semi-automated | Very little sample required with large dynamic ranges | Dependence on Q-PCR/NGS for readout | |
| Protein samples immobilized onto the solid substrates. Targets detected by antibodies with signal amplification. | ~ 500 | Up to 1056 | Femtogram/ 5-6 logs | Colorimetric assays or fluorescence | Targeted | Heavy instrumentation and non-standardized workflows, Semi-automated | Large scale parallel analysis for samples. Suitable for protein PTMs | Relatively long turnaround time |
Fig. 2Proteomics-based cancer liquid biopsy for translational medicine. A workflow of clinical biomarker discovery divided into three stages (biomarker screening, candidate selection, and large-scale validation and implementation). Untargeted and targeted routes for biomarker exploratory with their analytical scopes are shown. Intensities of the blue color denote their probable significance at individual stages