4.8 Article

Cancer Biomarkers Defined by Autoantibody Signatures to Aberrant O-Glycopeptide Epitopes

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 70, Issue 4, Pages 1306-1313

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-09-2893

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Funding

  1. Carlsberg Foundation
  2. Benzon Foundation
  3. Danish Research Council
  4. Center of Excellence Copenhagen University
  5. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  6. NIH [PO1 CA052477 1U01CA128437-01]
  7. EU [EU-FP7-HEALTH-2007-A 201381]

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Autoantibodies to cancer antigens hold promise as biomarkers for early detection of cancer. Proteins that are aberrantly processed in cancer cells are likely to present autoantibody targets. The extracellular mucin MUC1 is overexpressed and aberrantly glycosylated in many cancers; thus, we evaluated whether auto-antibodies generated to aberrant O-glycoforms of MUC1 might serve as sensitive diagnostic biomarkers for cancer. Using an antibody-based glycoprofiling ELISA assay, we documented that aberrant truncated glycoforms were not detected in sera of cancer patients. An O-glycopeptide microarray was developed that detected IgG antibodies to aberrant O-glycopeptide epitopes in patients vaccinated with a keyhole limpet hemocyanin-conjugated truncated MUC1 peptide. We detected cancer-associated IgG autoantibodies in sera from breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer patients against different aberrent O-glycopeptide epitopes derived from MUC1. These autoantibodies represent a previously unaddressed source of sensitive biomarkers for early detection of cancer. The methods we have developed for chemoenzymatic synthesis of O-glycopeptides on microarrays may allow for broader mining of the entire cancer O-glycopeptidome. Cancer Res; 70(4); 1306-13. (C) 2010 AACR.

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