Tibes Raoul, Qiu Yihua, Lu Yiling, Hennessy Bryan, Andreeff Michael, Mills Gordon B, Kornblau Steven M
Department of Medical Oncology, The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030-4095, USA.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2006 Oct;5(10):2512-21. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-06-0334.
Proteomics has the potential to provide answers in cancer pathogenesis and to direct targeted therapy through the comprehensive analysis of protein expression levels and activation status. The realization of this potential requires the development of new, rapid, high-throughput technologies for performing protein arrays on patient samples, as well as novel analytic techniques to interpret them. Herein, we describe the validation and robustness of using reverse phase protein arrays (RPPA) for the analysis of primary acute myelogenous leukemia samples as well as leukemic and normal stem cells. In this report, we show that array printing, detection, amplification, and staining precision are very high, reproducible, and that they correlate with traditional Western blotting. Using replicates of the same sample on the same and/or separate arrays, or using separate protein samples prepared from the same starting sample, the intra- and interarray reproducibility was extremely high. No statistically significant difference in protein signal intensities could be detected within the array setups. The activation status (phosphorylation) was maintained in experiments testing delayed processing and preparation from multiple freeze-thawed samples. Differences in protein expression could reliably be detected in as few as three cell protein equivalents. RPPA prepared from rare populations of normal and leukemic stem cells were successfully done and showed differences from bulk populations of cells. Examples show how RPPAs are ideally suited for the large-scale analysis of target identification, validation, and drug discovery. In summary, RPPA is a highly reliable, reproducible, high-throughput system that allows for the rapid large-scale proteomic analysis of protein expression and phosphorylation state in primary acute myelogenous leukemia cells, cell lines, and in human stem cells.
蛋白质组学有潜力通过对蛋白质表达水平和激活状态的全面分析,为癌症发病机制提供答案并指导靶向治疗。要实现这一潜力,需要开发新的、快速的、高通量技术来对患者样本进行蛋白质阵列分析,以及新的分析技术来解读这些阵列。在此,我们描述了使用反相蛋白质阵列(RPPA)分析原发性急性髓性白血病样本以及白血病和正常干细胞的验证过程和稳健性。在本报告中,我们表明阵列打印、检测、扩增和染色精度非常高、可重复,并且与传统的蛋白质印迹法相关。在相同和/或不同阵列上使用同一样本的重复样本,或使用从同一起始样本制备的不同蛋白质样本,阵列内和阵列间的可重复性极高。在阵列设置中未检测到蛋白质信号强度的统计学显著差异。在对多个冻融样本的延迟处理和制备进行测试的实验中,激活状态(磷酸化)得以维持。在低至三个细胞蛋白质当量中就能可靠地检测到蛋白质表达的差异。从正常和白血病干细胞的稀有群体制备的RPPA成功完成,并显示出与大量细胞群体的差异。实例展示了RPPA如何非常适合用于靶点识别、验证和药物发现的大规模分析。总之,RPPA是一种高度可靠、可重复的高通量系统,可用于对原发性急性髓性白血病细胞、细胞系以及人类干细胞中的蛋白质表达和磷酸化状态进行快速大规模蛋白质组学分析。