PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Differential denaturation of serum proteome reveals a significant amount of hidden information in complex mixtures of proteins.

  • Vincenzo Verdoliva,
  • Cinzia Senatore,
  • Maria Letizia Polci,
  • Stefania Rossi,
  • Martina Cordella,
  • Giuseppe Carlucci,
  • Paolo Marchetti,
  • Giancarlo Antonini-Cappellini,
  • Antonio Facchiano,
  • Daniela D'Arcangelo,
  • Francesco Facchiano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057104
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e57104

Abstract

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UNLABELLED: Recently developed proteomic technologies allow to profile thousands of proteins within a high-throughput approach towards biomarker discovery, although results are not as satisfactory as expected. In the present study we demonstrate that serum proteome denaturation is a key underestimated feature; in fact, a new differential denaturation protocol better discriminates serum proteins according to their electrophoretic mobility as compared to single-denaturation protocols. Sixty nine different denaturation treatments were tested and the 3 most discriminating ones were selected (TRIDENT analysis) and applied to human sera, showing a significant improvement of serum protein discrimination as confirmed by MALDI-TOF/MS and LC-MS/MS identification, depending on the type of denaturation applied. Thereafter sera from mice and patients carrying cutaneous melanoma were analyzed through TRIDENT. Nine and 8 protein bands were found differentially expressed in mice and human melanoma sera, compared to healthy controls (p<0.05); three of them were found, for the first time, significantly modulated: α2macroglobulin (down-regulated in melanoma, p<0.001), Apolipoprotein-E and Apolipoprotein-A1 (both up-regulated in melanoma, p<0.04), both in mice and humans. The modulation was confirmed by immunological methods. Other less abundant proteins (e.g. gelsolin) were found significantly modulated (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: i) serum proteome contains a large amount of information, still neglected, related to proteins folding; ii) a careful serum denaturation may significantly improve analytical procedures involving complex protein mixtures; iii) serum differential denaturation protocol highlights interesting proteomic differences between cancer and healthy sera.