Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal forms of cancer, primarily because it is usually diagnosed very late.
Current markers are too insensitive and unspecific for early detection screenings.
In the journal Angewandte Chemie, a research team has now introduced a new method that could lead to a significantly more precise and reliable diagnosis.
It is based on the selective detection of specific antibodies in blood samples.
Tumours produce certain proteins (tumour-associated antigens) that draw the attention of our constantly “patrolling” immune system and trigger an immune response. As a consequence, antibodies directed against the tumours (tumour-associated autoantibodies) are formed, circulating in the blood at very early stages of the disease—which makes them useful for early detection.
An international team led by Roberto Fiammengo and Giovanni Malerba at the University of Verona (Italy) as well as Alfredo Martínez at the Center for Biomedical Research of La Rioja (Logroño, Spain) and Francisco Corzana at the Universidad de La Rioja , has now developed an approach to diagnostic testing for pancreatic cancer that is based on the detection of such special tumour-associated autoantibodies.
They chose to use autoantibodies directed against the tumour-associated form of mucin-1 (TA-MUC1). Mucin-1 is a heavily glycosylated protein (a protein with sugar components) that occurs, for example, in glandular tissue.
In many types of tumours, including pancreatic cancer, it is found in significantly elevated concentrations. In addition, the pattern of glycosylation is different from the normal form. The team’s goal was to detect autoantibodies that are directed specifically against TA-MUC1 and are a clear indicator of pancreatic cancer.
Based on structural analyses and computer simulations of known antibodies against TA-MUC1 (SM3 and 5E5), the team designed a collection of synthetic glycopeptides that mimic different segments (epitopes) of TA-MUC1. They also made unnatural modifications to increase the chances of identifying autoantibody subgroups indicative of the disease.
The team immobilised these model antigens on gold nanoparticles achieving probes suitable for a serological assay (dot-blot assay). The diagnostic assay was validated with real samples from patients with pancreatic cancer and a healthy control group.
Some of the nanoparticle probes could differentiate very well between samples from diseased and healthy individuals demonstrating they detected tumour associated autoantibodies. Notably, these specific autoantibodies displayed significantly better correct positive/false positive ratios than current clinical biomarkers for pancreatic cancer.
Probes with smaller glycopeptide antigens that correspond to only a single epitope, gave better results than larger probes that mimic multiple epitopes—an advantage for easier synthetic production.
A short glycopeptide with an unnatural modification to its sugar component was found to be particularly effective for the detection of discriminating autoantibodies.
This new structure-based approach could help in the selection of autoantibody subgroups with higher tumour specificity.
Source: Wiley
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