Abstract

Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease whose molecular diversity is not well reflected in clinical and pathological markers used for prognosis and treatment selection. As tumor cells secrete proteins into the extracellular environment, some of these proteins reach circulation and could become suitable biomarkers for improving diagnosis or monitoring response to treatment. As many signaling pathways and interaction networks are altered in cancerous tissues by protein phosphorylation, changes in the secretory phosphoproteome of cancer tissues could reflect both disease progression and subtype. To test this hypothesis, we compared the phosphopeptide-enriched fractions obtained from proteins secreted into conditioned media (CM) derived from five luminal and five basal type breast cancer cell lines using label-free quantitative mass spectrometry. Altogether over 5000 phosphosites derived from 1756 phosphoproteins were identified, several of which have the potential to qualify as phosphopeptide plasma biomarker candidates for the more aggressive basal and also the luminal-type breast cancers. The analysis of phosphopeptides from breast cancer patient plasma and controls allowed us to construct a discovery list of phosphosites under rigorous collection conditions, and second to qualify discovery candidates generated from the CM studies. Indeed, a set of basal-specific phosphorylation CM site candidates derived from IBP3, CD44, OPN, FSTL3, LAMB1, and STC2, and luminal-specific candidates derived from CYTC and IBP5 were selected and, based on their presence in plasma, quantified across all cell line CM samples using Skyline MS1 intensity data. Together, this approach allowed us to assemble a set of novel cancer subtype specific phosphopeptide candidates for subsequent biomarker verification and clinical validation.

Highlights

  • Title Phosphoprotein secretome of tumor cells as a source of candidates for breast cancer biomarkers in plasma

  • A set of basal-specific phosphorylation conditioned media (CM) site candidates derived from IBP3, CD44, OPN, follistatin-related protein 3 (FSTL3), LAMB1, and STC2, and luminal-specific candidates derived from CYTC and IGF binding protein 5 (IBP5) were selected and, based on their presence in plasma, quantified across all

  • Enrichment and Identification of Phosphopeptides from CM—To identify phosphoproteins in CM of human Breast cancer (BC) cell lines, we developed an optimized and robust workflow based on phosphopeptide enrichment and mass spectrometry analysis (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Title Phosphoprotein secretome of tumor cells as a source of candidates for breast cancer biomarkers in plasma. As many signaling pathways and interaction networks are altered in cancerous tissues by protein phosphorylation, changes in the secretory phosphoproteome of cancer tissues could reflect both disease progression and subtype. To test this hypothesis, we compared the phosphopeptide-enriched fractions obtained from proteins secreted into conditioned media (CM) derived from five luminal and five basal type breast cancer cell lines using label-free quantitative mass spectrometry. Cell line CM samples using Skyline MS1 intensity data Together, this approach allowed us to assemble a set of novel cancer subtype specific phosphopeptide candidates for subsequent biomarker verification and clinical validation. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 13: 10.1074/ mcp.M113.035485, 1034–1049, 2014

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