Cell Surface Proteomics Reveals Hypoxia-Regulated Pathways in Cervical and Bladder Cancer

  • Faris Alanazi
  • , Ammar Sharif
  • , Melissa Kidd
  • , Emma Keevill
  • , Richard Unwin
  • , Peter Hoskin
  • , Ananya Choudhury
  • , Tim A D Smith
  • , Conrado Quiles

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Background Plasma membrane proteins (PMPs) play key roles in cell signalling, adhesion, and trafficking, and are attractive therapeutic targets in cancer due to their surface accessibility. However, their typically low abundance limits detection by conventional proteomic approaches. Methods: To improve PMP detection, we employed a surface proteomics workflow combining cell surface biotinylation and affinity purification prior to LC-MS/MS analysis in cervical (SiHa) and bladder (UMUC3) cancer cell lines cultured under normoxic (21% O2) or hypoxic (0.1% O2) conditions. Results: In SiHa cells, 43 hypoxia-upregulated proteins were identified exclusively in the biotin-enriched fraction, including ITGB2, ITGA7,
AXL, MET, JAG2, and CAV1/CAV2. In UMUC3 cells, 32 unique upregulated PMPs were detected, including CD55, ADGRB1, SLC9A1, NECTIN3, and ACTG1. These proteins were not observed in corresponding whole-cell lysates and are associated with extracellular matrix remodelling, immune modulation, and ion transport. Biotinylation enhanced the detection of membrane-associated pathways such as ECM organisation, integrin signalling, and PI3K–Akt
activation. Protein–protein interaction analysis revealed links between membrane receptors and intracellular stress regulators, including mitochondrial proteins. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that surface biotinylation improves the sensitivity and selectivity of plasma membrane proteomics under hypoxia, revealing hypoxia-responsive proteins and pathways not captured by standard whole-cell analysis
Original languageEnglish
Article number36
Number of pages18
JournalProteomes
Volume13
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Aug 2025

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • LC-MS/MS
  • bladder cancer
  • cell surface biotinylation
  • cervical cancer
  • hypoxia
  • plasma membrane proteomics

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