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Data from Diagnostic Markers of Ovarian Cancer by High-Throughput Antigen Cloning and Detection on Arrays

Authors :
Michael A. Tainsky
Sorin Draghici
Judith Abrams
Gerard Tromp
Natalie N. Shirley
Nancy K. Levin
Robert Morris
Adnan Munkarah
David Fishman
Steven S. Witkin
Karen Lu
Fatimah A. Nahhas
Bin Ye
James Nowak
Xiaoju Wang
Rouba Ali-Fehmi
Gagandeep Bawa
Alexei Ionan
Saroj Mohapatra
Madhumita Chatterjee
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

A noninvasive screening test would significantly facilitate early detection of epithelial ovarian cancer. This study used a combination of high-throughput selection and array-based serologic detection of many antigens indicative of the presence of cancer, thereby using the immune system as a biosensor. This high-throughput selection involved biopanning of an ovarian cancer phage display library using serum immunoglobulins from an ovarian cancer patient as bait. Protein macroarrays containing 480 of these selected antigen clones revealed 65 clones that interacted with immunoglobulins in sera from 32 ovarian cancer patients but not with sera from 25 healthy women or 14 patients having other benign or malignant gynecologic diseases. Sequence analysis data of these 65 clones revealed 62 different antigens. Among the markers, we identified some known antigens, including RCAS1, signal recognition protein-19, AHNAK-related sequence, nuclear autoantogenic sperm protein, Nijmegen breakage syndrome 1 (Nibrin), ribosomal protein L4, Homo sapiens KIAA0419 gene product, eukaryotic initiation factor 5A, and casein kinase II, as well as many previously uncharacterized antigenic gene products. Using these 65 antigens on protein microarrays, we trained neural networks on two-color fluorescent detection of serum IgG binding and found an average sensitivity and specificity of 55% and 98%, respectively. In addition, the top 6 of the most specific clones resulted in an average sensitivity and specificity of 32% and 94%, respectively. This global approach to antigenic profiling, epitomics, has applications to cancer and autoimmune diseases for diagnostic and therapeutic studies. Further work with larger panels of antigens should provide a comprehensive set of markers with sufficient sensitivity and specificity suitable for clinical testing in high-risk populations. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(2): 1181-90)

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5b12f6ef30bbfa0e60fcdda9f5b882c6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.c.6495291