<<< Full experiment listing

PXD027466

PXD027466 is an original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.

Dataset Summary
TitleInward outward signaling in ovarian cancer: morpho-proteomics/phosphoproteomics profiling upon hypoxia and shear stress characterizes the adaptive potential of OVCAR-3 and SKOV-3 cells
DescriptionWith the onset of resistance, ovarian cancer cells display almost unpredictable adaptive potential. This may derive from genetic ancestry of the tumor cells and can be additionally tailored by post translational protein modifications (PTMs). The latter are profoundly shaped by the physical and chemical cues of the cancer microenvironment which, for ovarian cancer, is primarily the abdominal cavity. In this study, we took advantage of high-end proteome and phosphoproteome analyses combined with multiparametric morphometric profiling for the description of the proteome signatures of high-grade serous carcinomas (OVCAR-3) and non-serous carcinomas (SKOV-3) ovarian cancer cells. For the functional experiments, we applied two different protocols, representing typical stimuli of the peritoneal cavity and of the growing tumor mass: on the one side hypoxia (oxygen 1%) which develops within the tumor mass or is experienced during migration/extravasation in non-vascularized tissues. For comparison, fluid shear stress (2.8 dyn/cm2, orbital shaker method) which characterizes the tumor surface in peritoneal cavity or metastases spread in the bloodstream. After 3 hours incubation, treatment groups were clearly distinguishable by PCA analysis. Whereas basal proteome profile of SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3 cells appeared almost unchanged, phosphoproteome analysis revealed multiple regulations. These affected primarily cellular structure and proliferative potential and consolidated after 24h treatment. Albeit maintaining their individuality, hypoxia modified cell metabolism and morphology of both OVCAR-3 and SKOV-3: upon oxygen reduction cell size increased in concerted regulation of pathways related to Rho-GTPases and/or cytoskeletal elements (proteome and phosphoproteome). Also shear stress stimulation sharpened the response profile of SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3: this retraced their pathophysiological behavior and actively modified structural proteins as well as metabolism (e.g. delta(14)-sterol reductase, Kinesin-like proteins (KIF-22/20A) and Actin-related protein 2/3 complex). In conclusion, we characterized a biochemical and structural fingerprinting describing the adaptive potential of ovarian cancer cells to physical/chemical stressors typical for the abdominal cavity.
HostingRepositoryPRIDE
AnnounceDate2022-01-13
AnnouncementXMLSubmission_2022-01-13_08:36:06.266.xml
DigitalObjectIdentifier
ReviewLevelPeer-reviewed dataset
DatasetOriginOriginal dataset
RepositorySupportUnsupported dataset by repository
PrimarySubmitterChristopher Gerner
SpeciesList scientific name: Homo sapiens (Human); NCBI TaxID: 9606;
ModificationListphosphorylated residue; acetylated residue; monohydroxylated residue; iodoacetamide derivatized residue
InstrumenttimsTOF Pro; Q Exactive
Dataset History
RevisionDatetimeStatusChangeLog Entry
02021-07-21 05:41:33ID requested
12022-01-13 08:36:06announced
Publication List
Dataset with its publication pending
Keyword List
submitter keyword: Ovarian cancer, fluid shear stress, hypoxia, morpho-metabolic adaptation, vasculogenic mimicry
Contact List
Christopher Gerner
contact affiliationUniversity of Vienna, Department of Analytical Chemistry, Joint Metabolome Facility
contact emailchristopher.gerner@univie.ac.at
lab head
Christopher Gerner
contact affiliationUniversity of Vienna
contact emailchristopher.gerner@univie.ac.at
dataset submitter
Full Dataset Link List
Dataset FTP location
NOTE: Most web browsers have now discontinued native support for FTP access within the browser window. But you can usually install another FTP app (we recommend FileZilla) and configure your browser to launch the external application when you click on this FTP link. Or otherwise, launch an app that supports FTP (like FileZilla) and use this address: ftp://ftp.pride.ebi.ac.uk/pride/data/archive/2022/01/PXD027466
PRIDE project URI
Repository Record List
[ + ]