Dissection of DEN-induced platelet proteome changes reveals the progressively dys-regulated pathways indicative of hepatocarcinogenesis.

2010 
Due to the lack of precise markers indicative of its occurrence, progression, and malignant stages, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is currently associated with high mortality. Given the fact that thrombocytopenia is associated with chronic liver diseases, and the multifunctional nature of platelets we reason that phenotype-specific platelets could be the systemic barometer for hepato-carcinogenesis. The mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomic efforts to discover novel biomarkers in plasma or serum are largely compromised by a few of the overwhelmingly abundant proteins that comprise over 95% of the total protein mass of plasma or sera. Platelets however are free of these MS signal-suppressing proteins. On the basis of a HCC animal model where diethyl nitrosamine (DEN) administration on male rats specifically induces HCC, by using a multiplex quantitative proteomic approach, we profiled the phase-to-phase proteome changes in a series of viable phenotype-specific platelets along with the DEN-induced progress...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    38
    References
    9
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []