Publications by authors named "Sabrina Hanke"

For mass spectrometry-based proteomic analyses, electrospray ionization (ESI) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) are the commonly used ionization techniques. To investigate the influence of the ion source on peptide detection in large-scale proteomics, an optimized GeLC/MS workflow was developed and applied either with ESI/MS or with MALDI/MS for the proteomic analysis of different human cell lines of pancreatic origin. Statistical analysis of the resulting data set with more than 72 000 peptides emphasized the complementary character of the two methods, as the percentage of peptides identified with both approaches was as low as 39%.

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Objectives: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has been subclassified into 3 molecular subtypes: classical, quasi-mesenchymal, and exocrine-like. These subtypes exhibit differences in patient survival and drug resistance to conventional therapies. The aim of the current study is to identify novel subtype-specific protein biomarkers facilitating subtype stratification of patients with PDAC and novel therapy development.

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A promising approach for the development of novel therapeutics with fewer side effects in healthy tissues is the targeted delivery of bioactive molecules directly to the site of disease. Thus, one prerequisite is the identification of a robust, disease-specific, vascular accessible biomarker localized on the surface of diseased cells, in the surrounding extracellular matrix or on newly formed blood vessels. One avenue towards the identification of such biomarkers consists in the enrichment of the vascular accessible surface proteome fraction prior to analysis.

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Radiotherapy is a fundamental part of cancer treatment but its use is limited by the onset of late adverse effects in the normal tissue, especially radiation-induced fibrosis. Since the molecular causes for fibrosis are largely unknown, we analyse if epigenetic regulation might explain inter-individual differences in fibrosis risk. DNA methylation profiling of dermal fibroblasts obtained from breast cancer patients prior to irradiation identifies differences associated with fibrosis.

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Cysteine is unique among the proteinogenic amino acids due to its ability to form disulfide bonds. While this property is of vital importance for protein structures and biological processes, it causes difficulties for the mass spectrometric identification of cysteine-containing peptides. A common approach to overcome these problems in bottom-up proteomics is the reduction and covalent modification of sulfhydryl groups prior to enzymatic digestion.

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