MALDI-MS tissue imaging identification of biliverdin reductase B overexpression in prostate cancer

MALDI-MS tissue imaging identification of biliverdin reductase B overexpression in prostate cancer


Pallua,J.D.; Schaefer,G.; Seifarth,C.; Becker,M.; Meding,S.; Rauser,S.; Walch,A.; Handler,M.; Netzer,M.; Popovscaia,M.; Osl,M.; Baumgartner,C.; Lindner,H.; Kremser,L.; Sarg,B.; Bartsch,G.; Huck,C.W.; Bonn,G.K.; Klocker,H.;

New biomarkers are needed to improve the specificity of prostate cancer detection and characterisation of individual tumors. In a proteomics profiling approach using MALDI-MS tissue imaging on frozen tissue sections, we identified discriminating masses. Imaging analysis of cancer, non-malignant benign epithelium and stromal areas of 15 prostatectomy specimens in a test and 10 in a validation set identified characteristic m/z peaks for each tissue type, e.g. m/z 10775 for benign epithelial, m/z 6284 and m/z 6657.5 for cancer and m/z 4965 for stromal tissue. A 10-fold cross-validation analysis showed highest discriminatory ability to separate tissue types for m/z 6284 and m/z 6657.5, both overexpressed in cancer, and a multicomponent mass peak cluster at m/z 10775-10797.4 overexpressed in benign epithelial tissue. ROC AUC values for these three masses ranged from 0.85 to 0.95 in the discrimination of malignant and non-malignant tissue. To identify the underlying proteins, prostate whole tissue extract was separated by nano-HPLC and subjected to MALDI TOF/TOF analysis. Proteins in fractions containing discriminatory m/z masses were identified by MS/MS analysis and candidate marker proteins subsequently validated by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Biliverdin reductase B (BLVRB) turned out to be overexpressed in PCa tissue. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: In this study on cryosections of radical prostatectomies of prostate cancer patients, we performed a MALDI-MS tissue imaging analysis and a consecutive protein identification of significant m/z masses by nano-HPLC, MALDI TOF/TOF and MS/MS analysis. We identified BLVRB as a potential biomarker in the discrimination of PCa and benign tissue, also suggesting BVR as a feasible therapeutic target

J.Proteomics. 2013 91:500-514
PubMed: 23954705