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Abstract
Background:
The majority of patients
diagnosed with advanced epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) relapse with
resistant disease, and there are no biomarkers that possess clinical
utility to identify or monitor these patients. This study aimed to
identify secreted proteins (‘secretome’) collected from human EOC cell
lines that differ in their inherent platinum sensitivity.
Methods:
Secreted
proteins collected from conditioned medium from ovarian cancer cell
lines that vary in their sensitivity to cisplatin were digested with
trypsin and analysed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry
for peptide identification.
Results:
Of
the 1688 proteins identified, 16 possessed significant differential
abundances (P<0.05) between the platinum-resistant and -sensitive
cell lines. A number of these were verified by immunoblot, including
COL11A1, which was also found to be associated with worse
progression-free survival (PFS; N=723) and overall survival (OS; N=1183) as assessed from publicly available transcript expression data from ovarian cancer tumour specimens.
Conclusion:
Secretome
proteomics of EOC cells resulted in the identification of a novel
candidate biomarker, COL11A1 (+search). The expression level of COL11A1 correlates
to worse PFS and OS, and is predicted to reside in peripheral
circulation making this an attractive candidate for validation in sera
as a biomarker of cisplatin resistance and poor outcome.
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