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High Throughput Isolation and Data Independent Acquisition Mass Spectrometry (DIA-MS) of Urinary Extracellular Vesicles to Improve Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

Hao Zhang, Guiyuan Zhang, Wei-Chao Su, Ya‐Ting Chen, Yufeng Liu, Dong Wei, Yanxi Zhang, Qiu‐Yi Tang, Yuxiang Liu, Shi-Zhi Wang, Wenchao Li, Anke Wesselius, Maurice P. Zeegers, Ziyu Zhang, Yanhong Gu, W. Andy Tao, Evan Y. Yu

2022Molecules18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Proteomic profiling of extracellular vesicles (EVs) represents a promising approach for early detection and therapeutic monitoring of diseases such as cancer. The focus of this study was to apply robust EV isolation and subsequent data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry (DIA-MS) for urinary EV proteomics of prostate cancer and prostate inflammation patients. Urinary EVs were isolated by functionalized magnetic beads through chemical affinity on an automatic station, and EV proteins were analyzed by integrating three library-base analyses (Direct-DIA, GPF-DIA, and Fractionated DDA-base DIA) to improve the coverage and quantitation. We assessed the levels of urinary EV-associated proteins based on 40 samples consisting of 20 cases and 20 controls, where 18 EV proteins were identified to be differentiated in prostate cancer outcome, of which three (i.e., SERPINA3, LRG1, and SCGB3A1) were shown to be consistently upregulated. We also observed 6 out of the 18 (33%) EV proteins that had been developed as drug targets, while some of them showed protein-protein interactions. Moreover, the potential mechanistic pathways of 18 significantly different EV proteins were enriched in metabolic, immune, and inflammatory activities. These results showed consistency in an independent cohort with 20 participants. Using a random forest algorithm for classification assessment, including the identified EV proteins, we found that SERPINA3, LRG1, or SCGB3A1 add predictable value in addition to age, prostate size, body mass index (BMI), and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). In summary, the current study demonstrates a translational workflow to identify EV proteins as molecular markers to improve the clinical diagnosis of prostate cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Prostate cancerProteomicsMass spectrometryUrinary systemExtracellular vesiclesProstateCancerChemistryComputational biologyOncologyMedicineBioinformaticsInternal medicineBiologyChromatographyBiochemistryGeneCell biologyExtracellular vesicles in diseaseInflammatory Biomarkers in Disease PrognosisFerroptosis and cancer prognosis
High Throughput Isolation and Data Independent Acquisition Mass Spectrometry (DIA-MS) of Urinary Extracellular Vesicles to Improve Prostate Cancer Diagnosis | Litcius