iTRAQ-Based Proteomic
Profiling of Breast Cancer Cell
Response to Doxorubicin and TRAIL
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Abstract
Breast cancer is a molecularly heterogeneous disease,
and predicting
response to chemotherapy remains a major clinical challenge. To minimize
adverse side-effects or cumulative toxicity in patients unlikely to
benefit from treatment, biomarkers indicating treatment efficacy are
critically needed. iTRAQ labeling coupled with multidimensional LC–MS/MS
of the enriched mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum fraction, key
organelles regulating apoptosis, has led to the discovery of several
differentially abundant proteins in breast cancer cells treated with
the chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin followed by the death receptor
ligand, TRAIL, among 571 and 801 unique proteins identified in ZR-75-1
and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell lines, respectively. The differentially
abundant proteins represent diverse biological processes associated
with cellular assembly and organization, molecular transport, oxidative
stress, cell motility, cell death, and cancer. Despite many differences
in molecular phenotype between the two breast cancer cell lines, a
comparison of their subproteomes following drug treatment revealed
three proteins displaying common regulation: PPIB, AHNAK, and SLC1A5.
Changes in these proteins, detected by iTRAQ, were confirmed by immunofluorescence,
visualized by confocal microscopy. These novel potential biomarkers
may have clinical utility for assessing response to cancer treatment
and may provide insight into new therapeutic targets for breast cancer