Proteomics-Based Mapping of the Lymph Node Metastasis Landscape in Cervical Cancer

Baoxia Cui · 2025-09-11

Lymph node metastasis (LNM) in cervical cancer is a critical determinant of the disease progression and prognosis. Elucidating its molecular mechanisms and identifying specific biomarkers are crucial for optimizing treatment. DIA-based quantitative proteomic sequencing was conducted on 49 cervical cancer patients. We screened differentially expressed proteins and performed functional enrichment, pathway scoring, time-series analysis, protein interaction studies, and integrated proteomic and TCGA transcriptomic data to identify biomarkers. 56 genes showed consistent expression trends, with 2 upregulated (SERPINB5, FABP5) and 54 downregulated (including ZNF512). Novel findings include activation of unsaturated fatty acid/steroid biosynthesis and inhibition of cell junction pathways during progression. Lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI) precedes LNM, but a subset of LNM cases lacks LVSI and exhibits a unique cholesterol metabolism activation. SERPINB5, FABP5, and ZNF512 were validated as potential prognostic and LNM-predictive biomarkers. DIA proteomics characterized cervical cancer lymph node metastasis, revealing molecular changes and potential biomarkers and offering new insights into its biological mechanisms.
Authors
Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82203468

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82203660

National Natural Science Foundation of China

82372940

Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province

ZR2021QH187