Specific effects exerted by B-lymphoproliferative diseases on peripheral T-lymphocyte protein expression

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Abstract

A proteomic approach was applied to study the protein expression profile of peripheral T-cells derived from patients at the onset of different B-lymphoproliferative diseases, because a rising interest in specific actions played by T-cells in such pathologies has emerged. Decreased levels of profilin-1 and cofilin-1 and increased levels of coronin1A and prohibitin were found in patients, compared with healthy controls. The protein-protein interaction network of these proteins was studied using a web-based bioinformatics tool, highlighting the actin cytoskeleton regulation as the main biological process involved in peripheral T-cells of such patients. Unsupervised cluster analysis of protein expression data shows that the recorded alteration of T-cell proteome was specifically induced by B-cell pathologies. © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Borro, M., Gentile, G., De Luca, O., Torre, M. S., Aimati, L., Tatarelli, C., … Simmaco, M. (2010). Specific effects exerted by B-lymphoproliferative diseases on peripheral T-lymphocyte protein expression. British Journal of Haematology, 150(4), 463–472. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2141.2010.08285.x

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