4.7 Article

Identification of Novel Accessible Proteins Bearing Diagnostic and Therapeutic Potential in Human Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages 4302-4313

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr200527z

Keywords

pancreas cancer; accessible proteins; biomarkers; proteomics

Funding

  1. University of Liege (ULG), Belgium
  2. CEE (FP7 network: ADAMANT-Antibody Derivatives As Molecular Agents for Neoplastic Targeting) [HEALTH-F2-2007-201342]
  3. National Fund for Scientific Research (NFSR, Belgium)
  4. TELEVIE
  5. Centre Anti-Cancereux of the ULG

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Pancreas ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a deadly malignancy with poor early diagnostic and no effective therapy. Although several proteomic studies have performed comparative analysis between normal and malignant tissues, there is a lack of clear characterization of proteins that could be of clinical value. Systemically reachable (potentially accessible) proteins, suitable for imaging technologies and targeted therapies represent a major group of interest. The current study explores potentially accessible proteins overexpressed in PDAC, employing innovative proteomics technologies. In the discovery phase, potentially accessible proteins from fresh human normal and PDAC tissues were ex vivo biotinylated, isolated and identified using 2D-nano-HPLC-MS/MS method. The analysis revealed 422 up-regulated proteins in the tumor, of which 83 (including protein isoforms) were evaluated as potentially accessible. Eleven selected candidates were further confirmed as up-regulated using Western blot and multiple reaction monitoring protein quantification. Of these, transforming growth factor beta-induced (TGFBI), latent transforming growth factor beta binding 2 (LTBP2), and asporin (ASPN) were further investigated by employing large scale immunohistochemistry-based validations. They were found to be significantly expressed in a large group of clinical PDAC samples compared to corresponding normal and inflammatory tissues. In conclusion, TGFBI, LTBP2, and ASPN are novel, overexpressed, and potentially accessible proteins in human PDAC. They bear the potential to be of clinical value for diagnostic and therapeutic applications and merit further studies using in vivo models.

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