2 research outputs found
A Panel of Regulated Proteins in Serum from Patients with Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia and Cervical Cancer
We
developed a discovery–validation mass-spectrometry-based
pipeline to identify a set of proteins that are regulated in serum
of patients with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and squamous
cell cervical cancer using iTRAQ, label-free shotgun, and targeted
mass-spectrometric quantification. In the discovery stage we used
a “pooling” strategy for the comparative analysis of
immunodepleted serum and revealed 15 up- and 26 down-regulated proteins
in patients with early- (CES) and late-stage (CLS) cervical cancer.
The analysis of nondepleted serum samples from patients with CIN,
CES, an CLS and healthy controls showed significant changes in abundance
of alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 1, alpha-1-antitrypsin, serotransferrin,
haptoglobin, alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein, and vitamin D-binding protein.
We validated our findings using a fast UHPLC/MRM method in an independent
set of serum samples from patients with cervical cancer or CIN and
healthy controls as well as serum samples from patients with ovarian
cancer (more than 400 samples in total). The panel of six proteins
showed 67% sensitivity and 88% specificity for discrimination of patients
with CIN from healthy controls, a stage of the disease where current
protein-based biomarkers, for example, squamous cell carcinoma antigen
(SCCA), fail to show any discrimination. Additionally, combining the
six-protein panel with SCCA improves the discrimination of patients
with CES and CLS from healthy controls
A Panel of Regulated Proteins in Serum from Patients with Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia and Cervical Cancer
We
developed a discovery–validation mass-spectrometry-based
pipeline to identify a set of proteins that are regulated in serum
of patients with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and squamous
cell cervical cancer using iTRAQ, label-free shotgun, and targeted
mass-spectrometric quantification. In the discovery stage we used
a “pooling” strategy for the comparative analysis of
immunodepleted serum and revealed 15 up- and 26 down-regulated proteins
in patients with early- (CES) and late-stage (CLS) cervical cancer.
The analysis of nondepleted serum samples from patients with CIN,
CES, an CLS and healthy controls showed significant changes in abundance
of alpha-1-acid glycoprotein 1, alpha-1-antitrypsin, serotransferrin,
haptoglobin, alpha-2-HS-glycoprotein, and vitamin D-binding protein.
We validated our findings using a fast UHPLC/MRM method in an independent
set of serum samples from patients with cervical cancer or CIN and
healthy controls as well as serum samples from patients with ovarian
cancer (more than 400 samples in total). The panel of six proteins
showed 67% sensitivity and 88% specificity for discrimination of patients
with CIN from healthy controls, a stage of the disease where current
protein-based biomarkers, for example, squamous cell carcinoma antigen
(SCCA), fail to show any discrimination. Additionally, combining the
six-protein panel with SCCA improves the discrimination of patients
with CES and CLS from healthy controls