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Meningiomas are brain tumors that originate from the meninges and has been primarily classified into three grades by the current WHO guidelines. Although widely prevalent and can be managed by surgery there are instances when the tumors are located in difficult regions. This results in considerable challenges for complete surgical resection and further clinical management. While the genetic signature of the skull base tumors is now known to be different from the non-skull base tumors, there is a lack of information at the functional aspects of these tumors at the proteomic level. Thus, the current study thereby aims to obtain mechanistic insights between the two radiologically distinct groups of meningiomas, namely the skull base & supratentorial (non-skull base-NSB) regions. We have employed a comprehensive mass spectrometry-based label-free quantitative proteomic analysis in Skull base and supratentorial meningiomas. Further, we have used an Artificial Neural Networking employing a sparse Multilayer perceptron (MLP) architecture to predict protein concordance. A patient-derived spectral library has been employed for a novel peptide-level validation of proteins that are specific to the radiological regions using the SRM assay based targeted proteomics approach. The comprehensive proteomics enabled the identification of nearly 4000 proteins with high confidence (1%FDR ≥ 2 unique peptides) among which 170 proteins were differentially abundant in Skull base vs Supratentorial tumors (p-value ≤0.05). In silico analysis enabled mapping of the major alterations and hinted towards an overall perturbation of extracellular matrix and collagen biosynthesis components in the non-skull base meningiomas and a prominent perturbation of molecular trafficking in the skull base meningiomas. Therefore, this study has yielded novel insights into the functional association of the proteins that are differentially abundant in the two radiological subgroups. SIGNIFICANCE: In the current study, we have performed label-free proteomic analysis on fresh frozen tissue of 14 Supratentorial (NSB) and 7 Skull base meningiomas to assess perturbations in the global proteome, we have further employed an in-depth in silico analysis to map the pathways that have enabled functional mapping of the differentially abundant proteins in the Skull base and Supratentorial tumors. The findings from the above were also subjected to a machine learning-based neural networking to find out the proteins that have the most concordance of occurrence to determine the most influential proteins of the network. We further validated the differential abundance of identified protein markers in a larger patient cohort of Skull base and Supratentorial employing targeted proteomics approach to validate key protein candidates emerging from ours and other recent studies. The previous studies that have explored the skull base and convexity meningiomas have been able to reveal alterations in the genetic mutations in these tumor types. However, there are not many studies that have explored the functional aspects of these tumors, especially at the proteome level. We have attempted for the first time to map the functional modules associated with altered proteins in these tumors and have been able to identify that there is a possibility that the Skull base meningiomas to be considerably different from the Non-skull base (NSB) tumors in terms of the perturbed pathways. Our study employed global as well as targeted proteomics to examine the proteomic alterations in these two tumor groups. The study indicates that proteins that were more abundant in Skull base tumors were part of molecular transport components, non-skull base proteins majorly mapped to the components of extracellular matrix remodeling pathways. In conclusion, this study substantiates the distinction in the proteomic signatures in the skull base and supratentorial meningiomas paving way for further investigation of the identified markers for determining if some of these proteins can be used for therapeutic interventions for cases that pose considerable challenges for complete resection. Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Citation

Shuvolina Mukherjee, Deeptarup Biswas, Sridhar Epari, Prakash Shetty, Aliasgar Moiyadi, Graham Roy Ball, Sanjeeva Srivastava. Comprehensive proteomic analysis reveals distinct functional modules associated with skull base and supratentorial meningiomas and perturbations in collagen pathway components. Journal of proteomics. 2021 Aug 30;246:104303

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PMID: 34174477

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