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Download fileMass Spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) Identified Proteomic Biosignatures of Breast Cancer in Proximal Fluid
journal contribution
posted on 2012-10-05, 00:00 authored by Stephen A. Whelan, Jianbo He, Ming Lu, Puneet Souda, Romaine
E. Saxton, Kym F. Faull, Julian P. Whitelegge, Helena R. ChangWe have begun an early phase of biomarker discovery in
three clinically important types of breast cancer using a panel of
human cell lines: HER2 positive, hormone receptor positive and HER2 negative, and triple negative (HER2-, ER-, PR-). We identified and
characterized the most abundant secreted, sloughed, or leaked proteins
released into serum free media from these breast cancer cell lines
using a combination of protein fractionation methods before LC–MS/MS
mass spectrometry analysis. A total of 249 proteins were detected
in the proximal fluid of 7 breast cancer cell lines. The expression
of a selected group of high abundance and/or breast cancer-specific
potential biomarkers including thromobospondin 1, galectin-3 binding
protein, cathepsin D, vimentin, zinc-α2-glycoprotein, CD44,
and EGFR from the breast cancer cell lines and in their culture media
were further validated by Western blot analysis. Interestingly, mass
spectrometry identified a cathepsin D protein single-nucleotide polymorphism
(SNP) by alanine to valine replacement from the MCF-7 breast cancer
cell line. Comparison of each cell line media proteome displayed unique
and consistent biosignatures regardless of the individual group classifications,
demonstrating the potential for stratification of breast cancer. On
the basis of the cell line media proteome, predictive Tree software
was able to categorize each cell line as HER2 positive, HER2 negative,
and hormone receptor positive and triple negative based on only two
proteins, muscle fructose 1,6-bisphosphate aldolase and keratin 19.
In addition, the predictive Tree software clearly identified MCF-7
cell line overexpresing the HER2 receptor with the SNP cathepsin D
biomarker.