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High-throughput proteomic analysis of FFPE tissue samples facilitates tumor stratification

Authors :
Zhu, Yi
Weiss, Tobias
Zhang, Qiushi
Sun, Rui
Wang, Bo
Yi, Xiao
Wu, Zhicheng
Gao, Huanhuan
Cai, Xue
Ruan, Guan
Zhu, Tiansheng
Xu, Chao
Lou, Sai
Yu, Xiaoyan
Gillet, Ludovic
Blattmann, Peter
Saba, Karim
Fankhauser, Christian D.
Schmid, Michael B.
Rutishauser, Dorothea
Ljubicic, Jelena
Christiansen, Ailsa
Fritz, Christine
Rupp, Niels Jan Felix
Poyet, Cedric
Rushing, Elisabeth
Weller, Michael
Roth, Patrick
Haralambieva, Eugenia
Hofer, Silvia
Chen, Chen
Jochum, Wolfram
Gao, Xiaofei
Teng, Xiaodong
Chen, Lirong
Zhong, Qing
Wild, Peter Johannes
Aebersold, Ruedi
Guo, Tiannan
Zhu, Yi
Weiss, Tobias
Zhang, Qiushi
Sun, Rui
Wang, Bo
Yi, Xiao
Wu, Zhicheng
Gao, Huanhuan
Cai, Xue
Ruan, Guan
Zhu, Tiansheng
Xu, Chao
Lou, Sai
Yu, Xiaoyan
Gillet, Ludovic
Blattmann, Peter
Saba, Karim
Fankhauser, Christian D.
Schmid, Michael B.
Rutishauser, Dorothea
Ljubicic, Jelena
Christiansen, Ailsa
Fritz, Christine
Rupp, Niels Jan Felix
Poyet, Cedric
Rushing, Elisabeth
Weller, Michael
Roth, Patrick
Haralambieva, Eugenia
Hofer, Silvia
Chen, Chen
Jochum, Wolfram
Gao, Xiaofei
Teng, Xiaodong
Chen, Lirong
Zhong, Qing
Wild, Peter Johannes
Aebersold, Ruedi
Guo, Tiannan
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Formalin‐fixed, paraffin‐embedded (FFPE ), biobanked tissue samples offer an invaluable resource for clinical and biomarker research. Here, we developed a pressure cycling technology (PCT )‐SWATH mass spectrometry workflow to analyze FFPE tissue proteomes and applied it to the stratification of prostate cancer (PC a) and diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (DLBCL ) samples. We show that the proteome patterns of FFPE PC a tissue samples and their analogous fresh‐frozen (FF ) counterparts have a high degree of similarity and we confirmed multiple proteins consistently regulated in PC a tissues in an independent sample cohort. We further demonstrate temporal stability of proteome patterns from FFPE samples that were stored between 1 and 15 years in a biobank and show a high degree of the proteome pattern similarity between two types of histological regions in small FFPE samples, that is, punched tissue biopsies and thin tissue sections of micrometer thickness, despite the existence of a certain degree of biological variations. Applying the method to two independent DLBCL cohorts, we identified myeloperoxidase, a peroxidase enzyme, as a novel prognostic marker. In summary, this study presents a robust proteomic method to analyze bulk and biopsy FFPE tissues and reports the first systematic comparison of proteome maps generated from FFPE and FF samples. Our data demonstrate the practicality and superiority of FFPE over FF samples for proteome in biomarker discovery. Promising biomarker candidates for PC a and DLBCL have been discovered.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1362814655
Document Type :
Electronic Resource