Abstract

IntroductionMeningioma are the most common primary intracranial tumour. According to WHO, ~80% tumours are benign grade I. Although, some grade I tumour clinically show aggressive behaviour. Radio-surgery are the main therapeutic approaches, chemotherapies are ineffective. Accurate biomarkers for clinical management are lacking. The mutational profile of low-grade meningioma is well-defined, with non-NF2 mutated tumours harbouring recurrent mutations in genes including TRAF7, KLF4, AKT1 and SMO. Here, we aim to identify novel biomarkers and therapeutic targets of genetically stratified low-grade meningioma by characterising the proteomic landscape.Materials and methodsMeningioma specimens were stratified according to mutational background: AKT1E17K/TRAF7, KLF4K409Q/TRAF7 and NF2-/-. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE followed by in-gel tryptic digestion and sample preparation for LC-MS/MS analysis. Raw mass spectrometry data files were processed by MaxQuant and Perseus software. Quantitative phospho-proteomics was performed using TMT-10plex labelling approach followed by motif analysis using motif-X algorithm. GO enrichment analyses were performed using DAVID against all human proteins.Results and ConclusionsWe have quantified 4162 proteins across all mutational meningioma subgroups and normal meninges (n=31). Hierarchical clustering analysis showed distinct proteomic profiles of mutational subgroups revealing clusters of differentially expressed proteins (DEPs). Comparative analysis showed 10 proteins were commonly significantly upregulated (log2 fold-change≥1; p<0.05) among all mutational subtypes vs. normal meninges, indicating proteomic landscapes of mutational subtypes to be highly variable. In contrast, 257 proteins were commonly significantly downregulated (log2 fold-change≤-1; p<0.05) and enriched with molecular functions including aldehyde dehydrogenase and oxido-reductase. Mutational subtype-specific analysis identified 162 proteins significantly upregulated in AKT1E17K/TRAF7 vs. remaining sample groups to be enriched in the oxidative phosphorylation pathway. Lastly, analyses of 6600 phospho-sites (n=8) predicted regulatory kinases including EGFR and PKCα. Several of these up-regulated proteins and kinases already verified via WB. Further validation and functional verification will allow us to identify potential drug targets/biomarkers for meningioma.

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