Dipartimento di Oncologia Sperimentale e Applicazioni Cliniche (DOSAC), Università di Palermo, Palermo, Italy.
BMC Cancer. 2010 Sep 3;10:476. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-476.
Attempts to reduce morbidity and mortality in breast cancer is based on efforts to identify novel biomarkers to support prognosis and therapeutic choices. The present study has focussed on S100 proteins as a potentially promising group of markers in cancer development and progression. One reason of interest in this family of proteins is because the majority of the S100 genes are clustered on a region of human chromosome 1q21 that is prone to genomic rearrangements. Moreover, there is increasing evidence that S100 proteins are often up-regulated in many cancers, including breast, and this is frequently associated with tumour progression.
Samples of breast cancer tissues were obtained during surgical intervention, according to the bioethical recommendations, and cryo-preserved until used. Tissue extracts were submitted to proteomic preparations for 2D-IPG. Protein identification was performed by N-terminal sequencing and/or peptide mass finger printing.
The majority of the detected S100 proteins were absent, or present at very low levels, in the non-tumoral tissues adjacent to the primary tumor. This finding strengthens the role of S100 proteins as putative biomarkers. The proteomic screening of 100 cryo-preserved breast cancer tissues showed that some proteins were ubiquitously expressed in almost all patients while others appeared more sporadic. Most, if not all, of the detected S100 members appeared reciprocally correlated. Finally, from the perspective of biomarkers establishment, a promising finding was the observation that patients which developed distant metastases after a three year follow-up showed a general tendency of higher S100 protein expression, compared to the disease-free group.
This article reports for the first time the comparative proteomic screening of several S100 protein members among a large group of breast cancer patients. The results obtained strongly support the hypothesis that a significant deregulation of multiple S100 protein members is associated with breast cancer progression, and suggest that these proteins might act as potential prognostic factors for patient stratification. We propose that this may offer a significant contribution to the knowledge and clinical applications of the S100 protein family to breast cancer.
降低乳腺癌发病率和死亡率的尝试是基于寻找新的生物标志物来支持预后和治疗选择。本研究集中在 S100 蛋白作为癌症发展和进展中具有潜在前景的标志物。该蛋白家族之所以受到关注,是因为大多数 S100 基因都聚集在人类染色体 1q21 上,该区域易发生基因组重排。此外,越来越多的证据表明,S100 蛋白在许多癌症中经常上调,包括乳腺癌,而且这通常与肿瘤进展有关。
根据生物伦理建议,在手术干预期间获得乳腺癌组织样本,并冷冻保存至使用。组织提取物进行 2D-IPG 蛋白质组学制备。通过 N 端测序和/或肽质量指纹图谱进行蛋白质鉴定。
大多数检测到的 S100 蛋白在原发性肿瘤相邻的非肿瘤组织中缺失或含量极低。这一发现加强了 S100 蛋白作为潜在生物标志物的作用。对 100 例冷冻保存的乳腺癌组织进行蛋白质组筛选显示,一些蛋白质在几乎所有患者中普遍表达,而另一些蛋白质则更为罕见。大多数(如果不是全部)检测到的 S100 成员似乎相互关联。最后,从建立生物标志物的角度来看,一个有希望的发现是观察到在三年随访后发生远处转移的患者的 S100 蛋白表达普遍较高,与无病组相比。
本文首次报道了对一组大样本乳腺癌患者的几种 S100 蛋白成员进行比较蛋白质组学筛选。研究结果强烈支持这样一种假设,即多个 S100 蛋白成员的显著失调与乳腺癌的进展有关,并表明这些蛋白可能是患者分层的潜在预后因素。我们提出,这可能为 S100 蛋白家族对乳腺癌的知识和临床应用提供重要贡献。