Quantitative proteomics of urinary bladder cancer cell lines identify uap1 as a potential therapeutic target
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Genes
Abstract
Bladder carcinoma (BC) incidence and mortality rates are increasing worldwide. The development of novel therapeutic strategies is required to improve clinical management of this cancer. Aberrant protein expression may lead to cancer initiation and progression. Therefore, the identification of these potential protein targets and limiting their expression levels would provide alternative treatment options. In this study, we utilized a liquid-chromatography tandem mass spectrometry-based global proteomics approach to identify differentially expressed proteins in bladder cancer cell lines. A total of 3913 proteins were identified in this study, of which 479 proteins were overexpressed and 141 proteins were downregulated in 4 out of 6 BC cell lines when compared with normal human urothelial cell line (TERT-NHUC). We evaluated the role of UDP-N-acetylhexosamine pyrophosphorylase (UAP1) in bladder cancer pathogenesis. The silencing of UAP1 led to reduction in proliferation, invasion, colony formation and migration capability of bladder cancer cell lines. Thus, our study reveals UAP1 as a promising therapeutic target for bladder cancer.
First Page
1
Last Page
17
DOI
10.3390/genes11070763
Publication Date
7-1-2020
Recommended Citation
Puttamallesh, Vinuth N.; Deb, Barnali; Gondkar, Kirti; and Jain, Ankit, "Quantitative proteomics of urinary bladder cancer cell lines identify uap1 as a potential therapeutic target" (2020). Open Access archive. 1405.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/1405