Publications by authors named "Brian Main"

Article Synopsis
  • Urine shows how healthy someone is and gives clues about the health of the organs that create it, containing both secreted proteins and proteins in tiny bubbles called extracellular vesicles (EVs).
  • Scientists studied the urine proteins of 190 men, including some with prostate cancer, and found a method to better collect prostate-related proteins from urine.
  • The research shows that urine can help tell the difference between serious and less serious prostate issues and that these urine proteins stay pretty consistent over the years, which is useful for medical studies.
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Introduction: Aberrant glycosylation of proteins is an important hallmark in multiple cancers. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a highly glycosylated protein with 10 N-linked glycosylation sites, is an Food and Drug Administration approved theranostic for prostate cancer. However, glycosylation changes in PSMA that are associated with prostate cancer disease progression have not been fully characterized.

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Urine is a complex biofluid that reflects both overall physiologic state and the state of the genitourinary tissues through which it passes. It contains both secreted proteins and proteins encapsulated in tissue-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs). To understand the population variability and clinical utility of urine, we quantified the secreted and EV proteomes from 190 men, including a subset with prostate cancer.

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The isolation and subsequent molecular analysis of extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from patient samples is a widely used strategy to understand vesicle biology and to facilitate biomarker discovery. Expressed prostatic secretions in urine are a tumor proximal fluid that has received significant attention as a source of potential prostate cancer (PCa) biomarkers for use in liquid biopsy protocols. Standard EV isolation methods like differential ultracentrifugation (dUC) co-isolate protein contaminants that mask lower-abundance proteins in typical mass spectrometry (MS) protocols.

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Purpose: The rs17632542 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) results in lower serum prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels which may further mitigate against its clinical utility as a prostate cancer biomarker. Post-digital rectal exam (post-DRE) urine is a minimally invasive fluid that is currently utilized in prostate cancer diagnosis. To detect and quantitate the variant protein in urine.

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Purpose: The introduction of new surgical approaches to radical prostatectomy requires methodologies that permit valid comparison that are more expedient than long-term outcomes of biochemical local and distant failure and survival. We used a computer modeling program to assess the percent of extracapsular tissue coverage of prostate glands removed by the open retropubic and laparoscopic approaches.

Materials And Methods: Specimens were available for 15 and 17 patients who underwent open and laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, respectively.

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