Purpose-The role of the microenvironment during the initiation and progression of carcinogenesis is now realized to be of critical importance, both for enhanced understanding of fundamental cancer biology, as well as exploiting this source of relatively new knowledge for improved molecular diagnostics and therapeutics.Methods-This review focuses on: (1) the approaches of preparing and analyzing secreted proteins, (2) the contribution of tumor microenvironment elements in cancer, and (3) the potential molecular targets for cancer therapy.Results-The microenvironment of a tumor is an integral part of its physiology, structure, and function. It is an essential aspect of the tumor proper, since it supplies a nurturing environment for the malignant process. A fundamental deranged relationship between tumor and stromal cells is essential for tumor cell growth, progression, and development of life threatening metastasis. Improved understanding of this interaction may provide new and valuable clinical targets for cancer management, as well as risk assessment and prevention. Non-malignant cells and secreted proteins from tumor and stromal cells are active participants in cancer progression.Conclusions-Monitoring the change in the tumor micro-environment via molecular and cellular profiles as tumor progresses would be vital for identifying cell or protein targets for cancer prevention and therapy.
Reliable methods for profiling secretory proteins are highly desirable for the identification of biomarkers of disease progression. Secreted proteins are often masked by high amounts of protein supplements in the culture medium. We have developed an efficient method for the enrichment and analysis of the secretome of different cancer cell lines, free of essential contaminants. The method is based on the optimization of cell incubation conditions in protein-free medium. Secreted proteins are concentrated and fractionated using a reversed-phase tC2 Sorbent, followed by peptide mass fingerprinting for protein identification. An average of 88 proteins were identified in each cancer cell line, of which more than 76% are known to be secreted, possess a signal peptide or a transmembrane domain. Given the importance of secreted proteins as a source for early detection and diagnosis of disease, this approach may help to discover novel candidate biomarkers with potential clinical significance.
Proteins secreted (the secretome) from cancer cells are potentially useful as biomarkers of the disease. Using LC-MS/MS, the secreted proteomes from a series of isogenic breast cancer cell lines varying in aggressiveness were analyzed by mass spectrometry: non-tumorigenic MCF10A, premalignant/ tumorigenic MCF10AT, tumorigenic/locally invasive MCF10 DCIS.com and tumorigenic/ metastatic MCF 10CA cl. D. Proteomes were obtained from conditioned serum-free media, partially fractionated using a small reverse phase C2 column and digested with trypsin for analysis by LC-MS/MS, using a method previously shown to give highly enriched secreted proteomes (Mbeunkui, et. al., J. Prot. Res. 5, 899-906 2006). The search files produced from 5 analyses (3 separate preparations) were combined for database searching (Mascot) which produced a list of over 250 proteins from each cell line. The aim was to discover highly secreted proteins which changed significantly in abundance corresponding with aggressiveness. The most apparent changes were observed for alpha-1-antichymotrypsin and galectin-3-binding protein which were highly secreted proteins from MCF10 DCIS.com and MCF10CA cl. D, yet undetected in the MCF10A and MCF10AT cell lines. Other proteins showing increasing abundance in the more aggressive cell lines included alpha-1-antitrypsin, cathepsin D and lysyl oxidase. The S100 proteins, often associated with metastasis, showed variable changes in abundance. While the cytosolic proteins were low (e.g. actin and tubulin), there was significant secretion of proteins often associated with the cytoplasm. These proteins were all predicted as products of non-classical secretion (SecretomeIP, Center for Biological Sequence Analysis). The LC-MS/MS results were verified for five selected proteins by western blot analysis, and the relevance of other significant proteins is discussed. Comparisons with two other aggressive breast cancer cell lines are included and the protein with consistent association with aggressiveness in all lines, and in unrelated cancer cells, was the galectin-3-binding protein which has been associated with breast, prostate and colon cancer earlier, supporting the approach and findings. This analysis of an isogenic series of cell lines suggests the potential usefulness of the secretome for identifying prospective markers for the early detection and aggressiveness/progression of cancer.
). † These authors contributed equally to this work. SummaryDue to ease of manipulation, metabolic isotope coding of samples for proteomic analysis is typically performed in cell culture, thus preventing an accurate in vivo quantitative analysis, which is only achievable in intact organisms. To address this issue in plant biology, we developed SILIP (stable isotope labeling in planta) using tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum cv. Rutgers) as a method that allows soil-grown plants to be efficiently labeled using a 14 N/ 15 N isotope coding strategy. After 2 months of growth on 14 N-and 15 N-enriched nitrogen sources, proteins were extracted from four distinct tomato tissues (roots, stems, leaves and flowers), digested, and analyzed by LC/MS/MS (data-dependent acquisition, DDA) and alternating low-and elevated-energy MS scans (data-independent acquisition, MS E ). Using a derived relationship to generate a theoretical standard curve, the measured ratio of the M (monoisotopic) and M-
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