Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells

Neuroendocrine tumours are rich sources of bioactive peptides and potentially-active fragments of proteins. As the cells that constitute such tumours have active regulated secretory pathways, they constantly deliver cocktails of these peptides into the circulation (tumours) or into the culture mediu...

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Main Author: Wei, Ran
Published: Queen's University Belfast 2015
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696333
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6963332017-05-24T03:38:34ZPeptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cellsWei, Ran2015Neuroendocrine tumours are rich sources of bioactive peptides and potentially-active fragments of proteins. As the cells that constitute such tumours have active regulated secretory pathways, they constantly deliver cocktails of these peptides into the circulation (tumours) or into the culture medium (cells). Many of these peptides may contribute to distinctive clinical tumour syndromes or may be involved in the growth and metastasis of the tumours themselves. This project, the first of its kind, was directed at the molecular inventory of the secretory peptidome of these tumours by application of high-throughput LC/MS/MS techniques. Individual peptides have been structurally-characterized and their parent proteins identified using bioinformatic techniques. They were then sorted into protein types, such as catalytic, structural, regulatory, etc., and comparisons made between individual tumour types to assess numbers of both common and unique components. Selected peptides were chemically-synthesized and subjected to appropriate bioassays. This project provides a body of basic information that may be of use to basic scientists and clinicians.616.99Queen's University Belfasthttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696333Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 616.99
spellingShingle 616.99
Wei, Ran
Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
description Neuroendocrine tumours are rich sources of bioactive peptides and potentially-active fragments of proteins. As the cells that constitute such tumours have active regulated secretory pathways, they constantly deliver cocktails of these peptides into the circulation (tumours) or into the culture medium (cells). Many of these peptides may contribute to distinctive clinical tumour syndromes or may be involved in the growth and metastasis of the tumours themselves. This project, the first of its kind, was directed at the molecular inventory of the secretory peptidome of these tumours by application of high-throughput LC/MS/MS techniques. Individual peptides have been structurally-characterized and their parent proteins identified using bioinformatic techniques. They were then sorted into protein types, such as catalytic, structural, regulatory, etc., and comparisons made between individual tumour types to assess numbers of both common and unique components. Selected peptides were chemically-synthesized and subjected to appropriate bioassays. This project provides a body of basic information that may be of use to basic scientists and clinicians.
author Wei, Ran
author_facet Wei, Ran
author_sort Wei, Ran
title Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
title_short Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
title_full Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
title_fullStr Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
title_full_unstemmed Peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
title_sort peptidomic and bioinformatic studies on neuroendocrine tumour cells
publisher Queen's University Belfast
publishDate 2015
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.696333
work_keys_str_mv AT weiran peptidomicandbioinformaticstudiesonneuroendocrinetumourcells
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