4.7 Article

A Strong Neutrophil Elastase Proteolytic Fingerprint Marks the Carcinoma Tumor Proteome

Journal

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 213-227

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M116.058818

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CEPT program [POIG.02.02.00-14-024/08-00]
  2. Nano-Fun program [POIG.02.02.00-00-025/09]
  3. National Science Centre (NCN) within project MAESTRO [UMO-2014/14/A/NZ1/00306]

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Proteolytic cascades are deeply involved in critical stages of cancer progression. During the course of peptide-wise analysis of shotgun proteomic data sets representative of colon adenocarcinoma (AC) and ulcerative colitis (UC), we detected a cancer-specific proteolytic fingerprint composed of a set of numerous protein fragments cleaved C-terminally to V, I, A, T, or C residues, significantly over-represented in AC. A peptide set linked by a common VIATC cleavage consensus was the only prominent cancer- specific proteolytic fingerprint detected. This sequence consensus indicated neutrophil elastase as a source of the fingerprint. We also found that a large fraction of affected proteins are RNA processing proteins associated with the nuclear fraction and mostly cleaved within their functionally important RNA-binding domains. Thus, we detected a new class of cancer-specific peptides that are possible markers of tumor-infiltrating neutrophil activity, which often correlates with the clinical outcome. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifiers: PXD005274 (Data set 1) and PXD004249 (Data set 2). Our results indicate the value of peptide-wise analysis of large global proteomic analysis data sets as opposed to protein-wise analysis, in which outlier differential peptides are usually neglected.

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