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Serum S100A6 concentration predicts peritoneal tumor burden in mice with epithelial ovarian cancer and is associated with advanced stage in patients

Authors :
R. Mark Simpson
John I. Risinger
Claudio Belluco
Francesco Meani
Antonella Ravaggi
Luca Martella
Weidong Zhou
Bih Rong Wei
Jeniffer B. Edwards
Mark M. Ross
Sergio Pecorelli
Shelley B. Hoover
Kevin D. Woolard
Elizabeth Spehalski
Paul K. Goldsmith
Emanuel F. Petricoin
Elio Campagnutta
W. Gregory Alvord
Octavio A. QuiƱones
Lance A. Liotta
Rei Ming Dai
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 4, Iss 10, p e7670 (2009), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2009.

Abstract

Background Ovarian cancer is the 5th leading cause of cancer related deaths in women. Five-year survival rates for early stage disease are greater than 94%, however most women are diagnosed in advanced stage with 5 year survival less than 28%. Improved means for early detection and reliable patient monitoring are needed to increase survival. Methodology and Principal Findings Applying mass spectrometry-based proteomics, we sought to elucidate an unanswered biomarker research question regarding ability to determine tumor burden detectable by an ovarian cancer biomarker protein emanating directly from the tumor cells. Since aggressive serous epithelial ovarian cancers account for most mortality, a xenograft model using human SKOV-3 serous ovarian cancer cells was established to model progression to disseminated carcinomatosis. Using a method for low molecular weight protein enrichment, followed by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis, a human-specific peptide sequence of S100A6 was identified in sera from mice with advanced-stage experimental ovarian carcinoma. S100A6 expression was documented in cancer xenografts as well as from ovarian cancer patient tissues. Longitudinal study revealed that serum S100A6 concentration is directly related to tumor burden predictions from an inverse regression calibration analysis of data obtained from a detergent-supplemented antigen capture immunoassay and whole-animal bioluminescent optical imaging. The result from the animal model was confirmed in human clinical material as S100A6 was found to be significantly elevated in the sera from women with advanced stage ovarian cancer compared to those with early stage disease. Conclusions S100A6 is expressed in ovarian and other cancer tissues, but has not been documented previously in ovarian cancer disease sera. S100A6 is found in serum in concentrations that correlate with experimental tumor burden and with clinical disease stage. The data signify that S100A6 may prove useful in detecting and/or monitoring ovarian cancer, when used in concert with other biomarkers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
4
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c818fc7ef86abd3987b9fa9db2164d5