Molecular Oncology (Feb 2023)

Glioblastoma stem cells express non‐canonical proteins and exclusive mesenchymal‐like or non‐mesenchymal‐like protein signatures

  • Haris Babačić,
  • Silvia Galardi,
  • Husen M. Umer,
  • Mats Hellström,
  • Lene Uhrbom,
  • Nagaprathyusha Maturi,
  • Deborah Cardinali,
  • Serena Pellegatta,
  • Alessandro Michienzi,
  • Gianluca Trevisi,
  • Annunziato Mangiola,
  • Janne Lehtiö,
  • Silvia Anna Ciafrè,
  • Maria Pernemalm

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13355
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. 238 – 260

Abstract

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Glioblastoma (GBM) cancer stem cells (GSCs) contribute to GBM's origin, recurrence, and resistance to treatment. However, the understanding of how mRNA expression patterns of GBM subtypes are reflected at global proteome level in GSCs is limited. To characterize protein expression in GSCs, we performed in‐depth proteogenomic analysis of patient‐derived GSCs by RNA‐sequencing and mass‐spectrometry. We quantified > 10 000 proteins in two independent GSC panels and propose a GSC‐associated proteomic signature characterizing two distinct phenotypic conditions; one defined by proteins upregulated in proneural and classical GSCs (GPC‐like), and another by proteins upregulated in mesenchymal GSCs (GM‐like). The GM‐like protein set in GBM tissue was associated with necrosis, recurrence, and worse overall survival. Through proteogenomics, we discovered 252 non‐canonical peptides in the GSCs, i.e., protein sequences that are variant or derive from genome regions previously considered non‐protein‐coding, including variants of the heterogeneous ribonucleoproteins implicated in RNA splicing. In summary, GSCs express two protein sets that have an inverse association with clinical outcomes in GBM. The discovery of non‐canonical protein sequences questions existing gene models and pinpoints new protein targets for research in GBM.

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