A large-scale targeted proteomics of serum and tissue shows the utility of classifying high grade and low grade meningioma tumors

Background Meningiomas are the most prevalent primary brain tumors. Due to their increasing burden on healthcare, meningiomas have become a pivot of translational research globally. Despite many studies in the field of discovery proteomics, the identification of grade-specific markers for meningioma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical proteomics 2023-09, Vol.20 (1), p.1-41, Article 41
Hauptverfasser: Halder, Ankit, Biswas, Deeptarup, Chauhan, Aparna, Saha, Adrita, Auromahima, Shreeman, Yadav, Deeksha, Nissa, Mehar Un, Iyer, Gayatri, Parihari, Shashwati, Sharma, Gautam, Epari, Sridhar, Shetty, Prakash, Moiyadi, Aliasgar, Ball, Graham Roy, Srivastava, Sanjeeva
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Meningiomas are the most prevalent primary brain tumors. Due to their increasing burden on healthcare, meningiomas have become a pivot of translational research globally. Despite many studies in the field of discovery proteomics, the identification of grade-specific markers for meningioma is still a paradox and requires thorough investigation. The potential of the reported markers in different studies needs further verification in large and independent sample cohorts to identify the best set of markers with a better clinical perspective. Methods A total of 53 fresh frozen tumor tissue and 51 serum samples were acquired from meningioma patients respectively along with healthy controls, to validate the prospect of reported differentially expressed proteins and claimed markers of Meningioma mined from numerous manuscripts and knowledgebases. A small subset of Glioma/Glioblastoma samples were also included to investigate inter-tumor segregation. Furthermore, a simple Machine Learning (ML) based analysis was performed to evaluate the classification accuracy of the list of proteins. Results A list of 15 proteins from tissue and 12 proteins from serum were found to be the best segregator using a feature selection-based machine learning strategy with an accuracy of around 80% in predicting low grade (WHO grade I) and high grade (WHO grade II and WHO grade III) meningiomas. In addition, the discriminant analysis could also unveil the complexity of meningioma grading from a segregation pattern, which leads to the understanding of transition phases between the grades. Conclusions The identified list of validated markers could play an instrumental role in the classification of meningioma as well as provide novel clinical perspectives in regard to prognosis and therapeutic targets. Keywords: Meningioma, High grade tumors, Low grade tumors, Glioblastoma/Glioma, Targeted Proteomics, Selected/Multiple reaction monitoring (SRM/MRM)
ISSN:1542-6416
1559-0275
DOI:10.1186/s12014-023-09426-9