4.6 Article

A highly multiplexed quantitative phosphosite assay for biology and preclinical studies

Journal

MOLECULAR SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/msb.202010156

Keywords

breast cancer; CPTAC; medulloblastoma; post-translational modifications; targeted mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. Novartis
  2. NIH/NCI from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium grants [NIH/NCI U24CA210986, U01CA214125, NIH/NCI U24CA210979]

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SigPath is a targeted mass spectrometry assay that measures various phosphosites in phosphoproteins, allowing for exploration of signaling biology with high throughput and quantitative precision. The assay successfully detected and quantified changes in phospho-signaling in drug-treated cancer cell lines and breast cancer models, highlighting its potential to monitor phosphoproteomic signaling events.
Reliable methods to quantify dynamic signaling changes across diverse pathways are needed to better understand the effects of disease and drug treatment in cells and tissues but are presently lacking. Here, we present SigPath, a targeted mass spectrometry (MS) assay that measures 284 phosphosites in 200 phosphoproteins of biological interest. SigPath probes a broad swath of signaling biology with high throughput and quantitative precision. We applied the assay to investigate changes in phospho-signaling in drug-treated cancer cell lines, breast cancer preclinical models, and human medulloblastoma tumors. In addition to validating previous findings, SigPath detected and quantified a large number of differentially regulated phosphosites newly associated with disease models and human tumors at baseline or with drug perturbation. Our results highlight the potential of SigPath to monitor phosphoproteomic signaling events and to nominate mechanistic hypotheses regarding oncogenesis, response, and resistance to therapy.

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