Proteomics of human prostate cancer biospecimens: the global, systems-wide perspective for protein markers with potential clinical utility.

Spiros D Garbis, Paul A Townsend

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Despite intense global efforts, no new clinical and/or viable biomarkers have been established to overcome the limitation of the prostate specific antigen in the early diagnosis and prognosis of prostate cancer (PCa). The current proteomic approaches to PCa biomarker discovery, each have distinct advantages and disadvantages, yet when combined hold real promise in the coming years. One key approach to this effort is the development of non-targeted, depletion-free and quantitative liquid chromatography-ultra high resolution tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS) pipelines for the systems-wide interrogation of the diverse proteomes encompassed in whole tissue and blood serum or plasma. Derived quantitative proteomes can be decoded for their biomedical relevance with advanced bioinformatics and bibliographic mining to yield promising 'molecular portraits' that can gauge prostatic disease at the serological level. Their functional annotation, although potentially useful, is beyond our current level of biological understanding and should not be requisite for their effective use in the clinical monitoring of prostatic disease.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalExpert review of proteomics
    Volume10
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Aug 2013

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