Mass Spectrometric Analysis of High-Mobility Group Proteins and Their Post-Translational Modifications in Normal and Cancerous Human Breast Tissues

Yan Zou and Yinsheng Wang*
Department of Chemistry-027, University of California at Riverside, Riverside, California 92521-0403
J. Proteome Res., 2007, 6 (6), pp 2304–2314
DOI: 10.1021/pr070072q
Publication Date (Web): April 25, 2007
Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society
*

 Address correspondence to Yinsheng Wang; e-mail, yinsheng.wang@ucr.edu; fax, (951) 827-4713; tel., (951) 827-2700.

Abstract

Abstract Image

High-mobility group (HMG) A1 proteins including HMGA1a and HMGA1b are chromosomal proteins that function in a variety of cellular processes such as cell growth, transcription regulation, neoplastic transformation, and progression. Overexpression of HMGA1 proteins has been associated with almost every type of cancer cells. Post-translational modifications (PTMs) of HMGA1 proteins in different types of human cancer cell lines have been extensively explored over the past decade. Here, we extended the identification of PTMs of HMGA1 proteins to human breast tumor tissue specimens with different carcinoma progression stages (metastatic and primary cancer) as well as the paired adjacent normal breast tissues. In this regard, we employed tandem mass spectrometry to examine the nature and sites of PTMs of HMGA1 proteins isolated from cancerous/normal human breast tissues. Novel PTMs of HMGA1a protein, that is, monomethylation at Lys30 and Lys54 as well as monophosphorylation at Ser43 and Ser48, were detected in cancer tissues. In these cancer tissues, we also found C-terminal constitutive phosphorylation in HMGA1a and HMGA1b as well as mono- and dimethylation of Arg25 in HMGA1a, which were previously found to be present in these proteins isolated from human cancer cell lines. Furthermore, a more complex spectrum of PTMs on HMGA1 proteins was correlated with a more aggressive malignancy in human breast cancer tissues.

Keywords: high-mobility group proteins • post-translational modifications • breast cancer • metastasis • mass spectrometry

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History

  • Published In Issue June 01, 2007
  • Received February 8, 2007

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