Frontiers in Oncology (Aug 2024)
Proteomic analysis of serum small extracellular vesicles identifies diagnostic biomarkers for neuroblastoma
Abstract
BackgroundNeuroblastoma (NB) primarily arises in children who are <10 years of age, and originates from developing sympathetic nervous system, which results in tumors in adrenal glands and/or sympathetic ganglia. The diagnosis of NB involves a combination of laboratory and imaging tests, and biopsies. Small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) have gained attention as potential biomarkers for various types of tumors. Here, we performed proteomic analysis of serum sEVs and identified potential biomarkers for NB.MethodsLabel-free proteomics of serum sEVs were performed in the discovery phase. A bulk RNA-seq dataset of NB tissues was used to analyze the association between genes encoding sEVs proteins and prognosis. Potential biomarkers were validated via multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) or western blot analysis in the validation phase. A public single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) dataset was integrated to analyze the tissue origin of sEVs harboring biomarkers.ResultsA total of 104 differentially expressed proteins were identified in NB patients with label-free proteomics, and 26 potential biomarkers were validated with MRM analysis. Seven proteins BSG, HSP90AB1, SLC44A1, CHGA, ATP6V0A1, ITGAL and SELL showed the strong ability to distinguish NB patients from healthy controls and non-NB patients as well. Integrated analysis of scRNA-seq and sEVs proteomics revealed that these sEVs-derived biomarkers originated from different cell populations in tumor tissues.ConclusionsEVs-based biomarkers may aid the molecular diagnosis of NB, representing an innovative strategy to improve NB detection and management.
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