In Vivo SILAC-Based Proteomics Reveals Phosphoproteome Changes during Mouse Skin Carcinogenesis
Publication year
2013Source
Cell Reports, 3, 2, (2013), pp. 552-66ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Cell Biology (UMC)
Journal title
Cell Reports
Volume
vol. 3
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 552
Page end
p. 66
Subject
NCMLS 4: Energy and redox metabolism IGMD 8: Mitochondrial medicineAbstract
Cancer progresses through distinct stages, and mouse models recapitulating traits of this progression are frequently used to explore genetic, morphological, and pharmacological aspects of tumor development. To complement genomic investigations of this process, we here quantify phosphoproteomic changes in skin cancer development using the SILAC mouse technology coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry. We distill protein expression signatures from our data that distinguish between skin cancer stages. A distinct phosphoproteome of the two stages of cancer progression is identified that correlates with perturbed cell growth and implicates cell adhesion as a major driver of malignancy. Importantly, integrated analysis of phosphoproteomic data and prediction of kinase activity revealed PAK4-PKC/SRC network to be highly deregulated in SCC but not in papilloma. This detailed molecular picture, both at the proteome and phosphoproteome level, will prove useful for the study of mechanisms of tumor progression.
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- Academic publications [232278]
- Electronic publications [115491]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89117]
- Open Access publications [82777]
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