학술논문

The Human Melanoma Proteome Atlas-Complementing the melanoma transcriptome
Document Type
Source
Clinical and Translational Medicine EpiHealth: Epidemiology for Health. 11(7):1-25
Subject
Antineoplastic Agents/therapeutic use
Blood Proteins/metabolism
Cell Line
Chromatography
High Pressure Liquid
Databases
Factual
Humans
Melanoma/drug therapy
Mutation
Protein Processing
Post-Translational/genetics
Proteome/metabolism
Proteomics/methods
Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf/genetics
Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Transcriptome
Naturvetenskap
Biologi
Biokemi och molekylärbiologi
Natural Sciences
Biological Sciences
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Klinisk medicin
Cancer och onkologi
Medical and Health Sciences
Clinical Medicine
Cancer and Oncology
Teknik
Industriell bioteknik
Medicinsk bioteknik
Engineering and Technology
Industrial Biotechnology
Medical Biotechnology
Language
English
ISSN
2001-1326
Abstract
The MM500 meta-study aims to establish a knowledge basis of the tumor proteome to serve as a complement to genome and transcriptome studies. Somatic mutations and their effect on the transcriptome have been extensively characterized in melanoma. However, the effects of these genetic changes on the proteomic landscape and the impact on cellular processes in melanoma remain poorly understood. In this study, the quantitative mass-spectrometry-based proteomic analysis is interfaced with pathological tumor characterization, and associated with clinical data. The melanoma proteome landscape, obtained by the analysis of 505 well-annotated melanoma tumor samples, is defined based on almost 16 000 proteins, including mutated proteoforms of driver genes. More than 50 million MS/MS spectra were analyzed, resulting in approximately 13,6 million peptide spectrum matches (PSMs). Altogether 13 176 protein-coding genes, represented by 366 172 peptides, in addition to 52 000 phosphorylation sites, and 4 400 acetylation sites were successfully annotated. This data covers 65% and 74% of the predicted and identified human proteome, respectively. A high degree of correlation (Pearson, up to 0.54) with the melanoma transcriptome of the TCGA repository, with an overlap of 12 751 gene products, was found. Mapping of the expressed proteins with quantitation, spatiotemporal localization, mutations, splice isoforms, and PTM variants was proven not to be predicted by genome sequencing alone. The melanoma tumor molecular map was complemented by analysis of blood protein expression, including data on proteins regulated after immunotherapy. By adding these key proteomic pillars, the MM500 study expands the knowledge on melanoma disease.