4.7 Article

Pediatric Brain Tumors: Signatures from the Intact Proteome

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23063196

Keywords

pediatric brain tumors; proteins; peptides; top-down proteomics; mass spectrometry

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The study aimed to explore the intact proteome of pediatric brain tumors of different WHO grades and localizations to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the onset and progression of these pathologies. Proteomic analysis revealed statistically significant differences in protein/peptide levels between tumor histotypes, as well as the identification of naturally occurring fragments and post-translational modifications. This study contributes to elucidating the molecular profiles of the most common solid tumors affecting children.
The present investigation aimed to explore the intact proteome of tissues of pediatric brain tumors of different WHO grades and localizations, including medulloblastoma, pilocytic astrocytoma, and glioblastoma, in comparison with the available data on ependymoma, to contribute to the understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the onset and progression of these pathologies. Tissues have been homogenized in acidic water-acetonitrile solutions containing proteases inhibitors and analyzed by LC-high resolution MS for proteomic characterization and label-free relative quantitation. Tandem MS spectra have been analyzed by either manual inspection or software elaboration, followed by experimental/theoretical MS fragmentation data comparison by bioinformatic tools. Statistically significant differences in protein/peptide levels between the different tumor histotypes have been evaluated by ANOVA test and Tukey's post-hoc test, considering a p-value > 0.05 as significant. Together with intact protein and peptide chains, in the range of molecular mass of 1.3-22.8 kDa, several naturally occurring fragments from major proteins, peptides, and proteoforms have been also identified, some exhibiting proper biological activities. Protein and peptide sequencing allowed for the identification of different post-translational modifications, with acetylations, oxidations, citrullinations, deamidations, and C-terminal truncations being the most frequently characterized. C-terminal truncations, lacking from two to four amino acid residues, particularly characterizing the beta-thymosin peptides and ubiquitin, showed a different modulation in the diverse tumors studied. With respect to the other tumors, medulloblastoma, the most frequent malignant brain tumor of the pediatric age, was characterized by higher levels of thymosin beta 4 and beta 10 peptides, the latter and its des-IS form particularly marking this histotype. The distribution pattern of the C-terminal truncated forms was also different in glioblastoma, particularly underlying gender differences, according to the definition of male and female glioblastoma as biologically distinct diseases. Glioblastoma was also distinguished for the peculiar identification of the truncated form of the alpha-hemoglobin chain, lacking the C-terminal arginine, and exhibiting oxygen-binding and vasoconstrictive properties different from the intact form. The proteomic characterization of the undigested proteome, following the top-down approach, was challenging to originally investigate the post-translational events that differently characterize pediatric brain tumors. This study provides a contribution to elucidate the molecular profiles of the solid tumors most frequently affecting the pediatric age, and which are characterized by different grades of aggressiveness and localization.

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