The Whole Proteome, Phosphoproteome, and Glycoproteome Landscape of Pan-Cancer Cell Lines Profiled by Mass Spectrometry and Reverse Phase Protein Array
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Mammalian cancer cell lines are essential model systems in biomedical research. We conducted multi-level proteomics analyses on 54 widely used cancer cell lines derived from various tissue-of-origins using two prominent proteomics technologies: mass spectrometry (MS) and reverse-phase protein array (RPPA). Our analysis identified 10,088 proteins, 33,609 phosphorylation sites across 7,289 phosphoproteins, and 56,350 site-specific glycans on 16,296 glycosylation sites from 5,966 glycoproteins, along with 305 drug-relevant protein and phosphoprotein targets. Our results reveal both consistent and distinct patterns in protein expression and modification between MS and RPPA, underscoring their complementary strengths as discovery tools. Additionally, we identified protein features that distinguish tissue origins across different cell line lineages. This dataset supports model system selection for drug target-related studies in vitro and provides valuable insights into key signaling pathways. Overall, this comprehensive resource enables new opportunities for exploration in cancer biology and offers significant value to research communities focused on biomarker profiling, drug target discovery, and understanding mechanisms across diverse cancer types.