4.3 Article

Proteomic profiling of canine fibrosarcoma and adjacent peritumoral tissue

Journal

NEOPLASIA
Volume 35, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.neo.2022.100858

Keywords

Soft-tissue sarcoma; Comparative oncology; Human fibrosarcoma; Laser-capture microdissection; Fibrosarcoma characterization; dog fibrosarcoma; rare cancers; adult-type fibrosarcoma not otherwise; specified

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It has been discovered that there is significant molecular homology between canine fibrosarcoma (FSA) and human soft-tissue sarcomas, highlighting the importance of studying canine FSA as a model for the human disease.
Fibrosarcoma (FSA) are rare soft tissue tumors that display aggressive local behavior and invasive growth leading to high rates of tumor recurrence. While the low incidence in humans hampers detailed understanding of the dis-ease, FSA are frequent in dogs and present potential models for the human condition. However, a lack of in-depth molecular characterization of FSA and unaffected peritumoral tissue (PTT) in both species impedes the transla-tional potential of dogs. To address this shortcoming, we characterized canine FSA and matched skeletal muscle, adipose and connective tissue using laser-capture microdissection (LCM) and LC-MS/MS in 30 formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) specimens. Principal component analysis of 3'530 different proteins detected across all samples clearly separates the four tissues, with several targets strongly differentiating tumor from all three PTTs. 25 proteins were exclusively found in tumor tissue in >= 80% of cases. Among these, CD68 (a macrophage marker), Optineurin (OPTN), Nuclear receptor coactivator 5 (NCOA5), RAP1GDS1 (Rap1 GTPase-GDP dissoci-ation stimulator 1) and Stromal cell derived factor 2 like 1 (SDF2L1) were present in >= 90% of FSA. Protein expression across all FSA was highly homogeneous and characterized by MYC and TP53 signaling, hyperactive EIF2 and immune-related changes as well as strongly decreased oxidative phosphorylation and oxidative lipid metabolism. Finally, we demonstrate significant molecular homology between canine FSA and human soft-tissue sarcomas, emphasizing the relevance of studying canine FSA as a model for human FSA. In conclusion, we pro-vide the first detailed overview of proteomic changes in FSA and surrounding PTT with relevance for the human disease.

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