Proteomics signature of autoimmune atrophic gastritis: towards a link with gastric cancer

Author:

Repetto OmbrettaORCID,De Re Valli,Giuffrida Paolo,Lenti Marco Vincenzo,Magris Raffaella,Venerito Marino,Steffan Agostino,Di Sabatino Antonio,Cannizzaro Renato

Abstract

Abstract Background Autoimmune atrophic gastritis (AAG) is a chronic disease that can progress to gastric cancer (GC). To better understand AAG pathology, this proteomics study investigated gastric proteins whose expression levels are altered in this disease and also in GC. Methods Using two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE), we compared protein maps of gastric corpus biopsies from AAG patients and controls. Differentially abundant spots (|fold change|≥ 1.5, P < 0.01) were selected and identified by LC–MS/MS. The spots were further assessed in gastric antrum biopsies from AAG patients (without and with Helicobacter pylori infection) and from GC patients and unaffected first-degree relatives of GC patients. Results 2D-DIGE identified 67 differentially abundant spots, with 28 more and 39 less abundant in AAG-corpus than controls. LC–MS/MS identified these as 53 distinct proteins. The most significant (adjusted P < 0.01) biological process associated with the less abundant proteins was “tricarboxylic acid cycle”. Of the 67 spots, 57 were similarly differentially abundant in AAG-antrum biopsies irrespective of H. pylori infection status. The differential abundance was also observed in GC biopsies for 14 of 28 more abundant and 35 of 39 less abundant spots, and in normal gastric biopsies of relatives of GC patients for 6 and 25 spots, respectively. Immunoblotting confirmed the different expression levels of two more abundant proteins (PDIA3, GSTP gene products) and four less abundant proteins (ATP5F1A, PGA3, SDHB, PGC). Conclusion This study identified a proteomics signature of AAG. Many differential proteins were shared by GC and may be involved in the progression of AAG to GC.

Funder

Italian Minister of Health

Ministero della Salute-Ricerca Corrente

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cancer Research,Gastroenterology,Oncology,General Medicine

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