pr300560y_si_002.xls (7.84 MB)
Download fileVariability of Protein and Phosphoprotein Levels in Clinical Tissue Specimens during the Preanalytical Phase
dataset
posted on 2012-12-07, 00:00 authored by Sibylle Gündisch, Stefanie Hauck, Hakan Sarioglu, Christina Schott, Christian Viertler, Marcel Kap, Tibor Schuster, Bilge Reischauer, Robert Rosenberg, Cornelis Verhoef, Hans-Joerg Mischinger, Peter Riegman, Kurt Zatloukal, Karl-Friedrich BeckerThe quality of human tissue specimens can have a significant
impact
on analytical data sets for biomarker research. The aim of this study
was to characterize fluctuations of protein and phosphoprotein levels
in human tissue samples during the preanalytical phase. Eleven intestine
and 17 liver specimens were surgically resected, aliquoted, and either
snap-frozen or fixed in formalin immediately or exposed to different
ischemic conditions before preservation. Protein levels in the resultant
samples were investigated by reverse phase protein array, Western
blot analysis, and liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry.
Our data revealed that the degree of sensitivity of proteins and phosphoproteins
to delayed preservation varied between different patients and tissue
types. For example, up-regulation of phospho-p42/44 MAPK in intestine
samples was seen in some patients but not in others. General trends
toward up- or down-regulation of most proteins were not evident due
to pronounced interpatient variability but signal intensities of only
a few proteins, such as cytokeratin 18, were altered from baseline
in postresection samples. In contrast, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate
dehydrogenase was found to be stable during periods of cold ischemia.
Our study represents a proper approach for studying potential protein
fluctuations in tissue specimens for future biomarker development
programs.