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Abstract

Background

Onco-proteogenomics aims to understand how changes in a cancer’s genome influences its proteome. One challenge in integrating these molecular data is the identification of aberrant protein products from mass-spectrometry (MS) datasets, as traditional proteomic analyses only identify proteins from a reference sequence database.

Methods

We established proteomic workflows to detect peptide variants within MS datasets. We used a combination of publicly available population variants (dbSNP and UniProt) and somatic variations in cancer (COSMIC) along with sample-specific genomic and transcriptomic data to examine proteome variation within and across 59 cancer cell-lines.

Results

We developed a set of recommendations for the detection of variants using three search algorithms, a split target-decoy approach for FDR estimation, and multiple post-search filters. We examined 7.3 million unique variant tryptic peptides not found within any reference proteome and identified 4771 mutations corresponding to somatic and germline deviations from reference proteomes in 2200 genes among the NCI60 cell-line proteomes.

Conclusions

We discuss in detail the technical and computational challenges in identifying variant peptides by MS and show that uncovering these variants allows the identification of druggable mutations within important cancer genes.

Details

Title
Detecting protein variants by mass spectrometry: a comprehensive study in cancer cell-lines
Author
Alfaro, Javier A; Ignatchenko, Alexandr; Ignatchenko, Vladimir; Sinha, Ankit; Boutros, Paul C; Kislinger, Thomas
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
1756994X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1925902753
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2017