4.7 Article

Lung Cancer Serum Biomarker Discovery Using Glycoprotein Capture and Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages 6440-6449

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr100696n

Keywords

lung cancer; serum biomarkers; glycoproteomics; LC-MS/MS; mass chromatogram

Funding

  1. Hirtzel Foundation [P50 CA90440]
  2. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [U01CA084968, P50CA090440] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Targeted glycoproteomics represents an attractive approach for conducting peripheral blood based cancer biomarker discovery due to the well known altered pattern of protein glycosylation in cancer and the reduced complexity of the resultant glycoproteome Here we report its application to a set of pooled nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) case sera (9 adenocarcinoma and 6 squamous cell carcinoma pools from 54 patients) and matched controls pools including 8 clinical control pools with computed tomography detected nodules but being nonmalignant as determined by biopsy from 54 patients, and 8 matched healthy control pools from 106 cancer-free subjects The goal of the study is to discover biomarkers that may enable improved early detection and diagnosis of lung cancer Immunoaffinity subtraction was used to first deplete the topmost abundant serum proteins the remaining serum proteins were then subjected to hydrazide chemistry based glycoprotein capture and enrichment Hydrazide resin in situ trypsin digestion was used to release nonglycosylated peptides Formerly N-linked glycosylated peptides were released by peptide-N glycosidase F (PNGase F) treatment and were subsequently analyzed by liquid chromatography (LC)-tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) A MATLAB based in-house tool was developed to facilitate retention time alignment across different LC MS/MS runs, determination of precursor ion m/z values and elution profiles, and the integration of mass chromatograms based on determined parameters for identified peptides A total of 38 glycopeptides from 22 different proteins were significantly differentially abundant across the case/control pools (P < 0 01, Student s t test) and their abundances led to a near complete separation of case and control pools based on hierarchical clustering The differential abundances of three of these candidate proteins were verified by commercially available ELISAs applied in the pools Strong positive correlations between glyco peptide mass chromatograms and ELISA-measured protein abundance was observed for all of the selected glycoproteins

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available