4.3 Article

Anti-FIRs (PUF60) auto-antibodies are detected in the sera of early-stage colon cancer patients

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 7, Issue 50, Pages 82493-82503

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12696

Keywords

auto-antibodies; cancer biomarker; colorectal cancer; far-upstream element-binding protein-interacting repressor (FIR) = poly(U)-binding-splicing factor (PUF60)

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan [26460667]
  2. Chiba Foundation for Health Promotion & Disease Prevention
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K11379] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Anti-PUF60, poly(U)-binding-splicing factor, autoantibodies are reported to be detected in the sera of dermatomyositis and Sjogren's syndrome that occasionally associated with malignancies. PUF60 is identical with far-upstream element-binding protein-interacting repressor (FIR) that is a transcriptional repressor of c-myc gene. In colorectal cancers, a splicing variant of FIR that lacks exon2 (FIR Delta exon2) is overexpressed as a dominant negative form of FIR. In this study, to reveal the presence and the significance of anti-FIRs (FIR/FIR Delta exon2) antibodies in cancers were explored in the sera of colorectal and other cancer patients. Anti-FIRs antibodies were surely detected in the preoperative sera of 28 colorectal cancer patients (32.2% of positive rates), and the detection rate was significantly higher than that in healthy control sera (Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.01). The level of anti-FIRs antibodies significantly decreased after the operation (p < 0.01). Anti-FIRs antibodies were detected in the sera of early-stage and/or recurrent colon cancer patients in which anti-p53 antibodies, CEA, and CA19-9 were not detected as well as in the sera of other cancer patients. Furthermore, the area under the curve of receiver operating characteristic for anti-FIRs antibodies was significantly larger (0.85) than that for anti-p53 antibodies or CA19-9. In conclusions, the combination of anti-FIRs antibodies with other clinically available tumor markers further improved the specificity and accuracy of cancer diagnosis.

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