scholarly journals Development of a targeted sequencing approach to identify prognostic, predictive and diagnostic markers in paediatric solid tumours

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Izquierdo ◽  
Lina Yuan ◽  
Sally George ◽  
Michael Hubank ◽  
Chris Jones ◽  
...  

AbstractThe implementation of personalised medicine in childhood cancers has been limited by a lack of clinically validated multi-target sequencing approaches specific for paediatric solid tumours. In order to support innovative clinical trials in high-risk patients with unmet need, we have developed a clinically relevant targeted sequencing panel spanning 311 kb and comprising 78 genes involved in childhood cancers. A total of 132 samples were used for the validation of the panel, including Horizon Discovery cell blends (n=4), cell lines (n=15), formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE, n=83) and fresh frozen tissue (FF, n=30) patient samples. Cell blends containing known single nucleotide variants (SNVs, n=528) and small insertion-deletions (indels n=108) were used to define panel sensitivities of ≥98% for SNVs and ≥83% for indels [95% CI] and panel specificity of ≥98% [95% CI] for SNVs. FFPE samples performed comparably to FF samples (n=15 paired). Of 95 well-characterised genetic abnormalities in 33 clinical specimens and 13 cell lines (including SNVs, indels, amplifications, rearrangements and chromosome losses), 94 (98.9%) were detected by our approach. We have validated a robust and practical methodology to guide clinical management of children with solid tumours based on their molecular profiles. Our work demonstrates the value of targeted gene sequencing in the development of precision medicine strategies in paediatric oncology.

Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 665
Author(s):  
Margot S.F. Roeten ◽  
Johan van Meerloo ◽  
Zinia J. Kwidama ◽  
Giovanna ter Huizen ◽  
Wouter H. Segerink ◽  
...  

At present, 20–30% of children with acute leukemia still relapse from current chemotherapy protocols, underscoring the unmet need for new treatment options, such as proteasome inhibition. Ixazomib (IXA) is an orally available proteasome inhibitor, with an improved safety profile compared to Bortezomib (BTZ). The mechanism of action (proteasome subunit inhibition, apoptosis induction) and growth inhibitory potential of IXA vs. BTZ were tested in vitro in human (BTZ-resistant) leukemia cell lines. Ex vivo activity of IXA vs. BTZ was analyzed in 15 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 9 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) primary pediatric patient samples. BTZ demonstrated more potent inhibitory effects on constitutive β5 and immunoproteasome β5i proteasome subunit activity; however, IXA more potently inhibited β1i subunit than BTZ (70% vs. 29% at 2.5 nM). In ALL/AML cell lines, IXA conveyed 50% growth inhibition at low nanomolar concentrations, but was ~10-fold less potent than BTZ. BTZ-resistant cells (150–160 fold) displayed similar (100-fold) cross-resistance to IXA. Finally, IXA and BTZ exhibited anti-leukemic effects for primary ex vivo ALL and AML cells; mean LC50 (nM) for IXA: 24 ± 11 and 30 ± 8, respectively, and mean LC50 for BTZ: 4.5 ± 1 and 11 ± 4, respectively. IXA has overlapping mechanisms of action with BTZ and showed anti-leukemic activity in primary leukemic cells, encouraging further pre-clinical in vivo evaluation.


Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 2950
Author(s):  
Kayleigh Slater ◽  
Aisling B. Heeran ◽  
Sandra Garcia-Mulero ◽  
Helen Kalirai ◽  
Rebeca Sanz-Pamplona ◽  
...  

Metastatic uveal melanoma (UM) is a rare, but often lethal, form of ocular cancer arising from melanocytes within the uveal tract. UM has a high propensity to spread hematogenously to the liver, with up to 50% of patients developing liver metastases. Unfortunately, once liver metastasis occurs, patient prognosis is extremely poor with as few as 8% of patients surviving beyond two years. There are no standard-of-care therapies available for the treatment of metastatic UM, hence it is a clinical area of urgent unmet need. Here, the clinical relevance and therapeutic potential of cysteinyl leukotriene receptors (CysLT1 and CysLT2) in UM was evaluated. High expression of CYSLTR1 or CYSLTR2 transcripts is significantly associated with poor disease-free survival and poor overall survival in UM patients. Digital pathology analysis identified that high expression of CysLT1 in primary UM is associated with reduced disease-specific survival (p = 0.012; HR 2.76; 95% CI 1.21–6.3) and overall survival (p = 0.011; HR 1.46; 95% CI 0.67–3.17). High CysLT1 expression shows a statistically significant (p = 0.041) correlation with ciliary body involvement, a poor prognostic indicator in UM. Small molecule drugs targeting CysLT1 were vastly superior at exerting anti-cancer phenotypes in UM cell lines and zebrafish xenografts than drugs targeting CysLT2. Quininib, a selective CysLT1 antagonist, significantly inhibits survival (p < 0.0001), long-term proliferation (p < 0.0001), and oxidative phosphorylation (p < 0.001), but not glycolysis, in primary and metastatic UM cell lines. Quininib exerts opposing effects on the secretion of inflammatory markers in primary versus metastatic UM cell lines. Quininib significantly downregulated IL-2 and IL-6 in Mel285 cells (p < 0.05) but significantly upregulated IL-10, IL-1β, IL-2 (p < 0.0001), IL-13, IL-8 (p < 0.001), IL-12p70 and IL-6 (p < 0.05) in OMM2.5 cells. Finally, quininib significantly inhibits tumour growth in orthotopic zebrafish xenograft models of UM. These preclinical data suggest that antagonism of CysLT1, but not CysLT2, may be of therapeutic interest in the treatment of UM.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kye Hwa Lee ◽  
Jinmin Goh ◽  
Yi-Jun Kim ◽  
Kwangsoo Kim

AbstractMolecular-targeted approaches are important for personalised cancer treatment, which requires knowledge regarding drug target specificity. Here, we used the synthetic lethality concept to identify candidate gene pairs with synergistic effects on drug responses. A synergistic chemo-sensitivity response was identified if a drug had a significantly lower half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) in cell lines with a pair of mutated genes compared with those in other cell lines (wild-type or one mutated gene). Among significantly damaging mutations in the Genomics of Drug Sensitivity in Cancer database, we found 580 candidate synergistic chemo-sensitivity interaction sets for 456 genes and 54 commercial drugs. Clustering analyses according to drug/gene and drug/tissue interactions showed that BRAF/MAPK inhibitors clustered together; 11 partner genes for BRAF were identified. The combined effects of these partners on IC50 values were significant for both drug-specific and drug-combined comparisons. Survival analysis using The Cancer Genome Atlas data showed that patients who had mutated gene pairs in synergistic interaction sets had longer overall survival compared with that in patients with other mutation profiles. Overall, this analysis demonstrated that synergistic drug-responsive gene pairs could be successfully used as predictive markers of drug sensitivity and patient survival, offering new targets for personalised medicine.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2758-2758 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita G Seto ◽  
Xuan T Beatty ◽  
Linda A Pestano ◽  
Brent A Dickinson ◽  
Marshelle S Warren ◽  
...  

Abstract Treatment-resistant hematological malignancies remain an area of high unmet need and novel therapeutic approaches will be required. microRNAs are small (~ 22 nt) non-coding RNAs that act as negative regulators of gene expression. These small RNAs impact expression of a substantial fraction of the genome, and have powerful effects on cellular phenotypes and physiological processes. miR-155-5p is a well-described oncomiR associated with poor prognosis in multiple malignancies, particularly lymphoma and leukemia. Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) is a rare hematological malignancy with limited treatment options and a strong mechanistic link to increased miR-155-5p. Because of the accessibility of cutaneous lesions, CTCL provides a unique opportunity to determine if inhibition of miR-155-5p has therapeutic potential in lymphomas associated with elevated miR-155-5p. We optimized a LNA-modified oligonucleotide inhibitor of miR-155-5p, MRG-106, based on the ability to de-repress canonical miR-155-5p targets in multiple cell types in vitro. In mycosis fungoides (MF) cell lines, MRG-106 does not require additional formulation to achieve maximum pharmacodynamic efficacy. Inhibition of miR-155-5p resulted in transcriptome changes consistent with miR-155-5p target gene modulation, reduction in cell proliferation, and activation of the programmed cell death pathway. The gene expression and phenotypic effects were inhibitor dose-dependent and sequence-specific. Based on an informatics approach for the expression profiling of MF cell lines treated with MRG-106, a set of 600 genes was identified to represent the translational pharmacodynamic biomarker signature, both direct and downstream of miR-155-5p. GLP preclinical safety studies have been completed in rats and non-human primates, demonstrating an acceptable safety profile for MRG-106. We plan to initiate a 4-week first-in-human clinical trial in CTCL (MF) patients. The trial design is two-part, with Part A testing the effect of direct intra-tumoral injection of MRG-106 into plaque and nodular skin lesions, and Part B testing the effect of systemic (subcutaneous) administration of higher doses of MRG-106. The primary objective of Part A is to profile the pharmacodynamic effect of MRG-106 on the miR-155-5p gene expression signature, establishing a PK/PD model to guide future development. The primary objective of Part B is to establish the safety, tolerability, PK and skin deposition of MRG-106 after systemic delivery. Exploratory objectives include measures for clinical response, immune system effects, and biomarker validation. Disclosures Seto: miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Beatty:miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pestano:miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Dickinson:miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Warren:miRagen Therapeutics: Consultancy. Rodman:miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership. Jackson:miRagen Therapeutics: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4207-4207
Author(s):  
Brian S White ◽  
Irena Lanc ◽  
Daniel Auclair ◽  
Robert Fulton ◽  
Mark A Fiala ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematologic cancer characterized by a diversity of genetic lesions-translocations, copy number alterations (CNAs), and single nucleotide variants (SNVs). The prognostic value of translocations and of CNAs has been well established. Determining the clinical significance of SNVs, which are recurrently mutated at much lower frequencies, and how this significance is impacted by translocations and CNAs requires additional, large-scale correlative studies. Such studies can be facilitated by cost-effective targeted sequencing approaches. Hence, we designed a single-platform targeted sequencing approach capable of detecting all three variant types. Methods: We designed oligonucleotide probes complementary to the coding regions of 467 genes and to the IgH and MYC loci, allowing a probe to closely match at most 5 regions within the genome. Genes were selected if they were expressed in an independent RNA-seq MM data set and harbored germline SNP-filtered variants that: (1) occurred with frequency >3%, (2) were clustered in hotspots, (3) occurred in recurrently mutated "cancer genes" (as annotated in COSMIC or MutSig), or (4) occurred in genes involved in DNA repair and/or B-cell biology. IgH and MYC tiling was unbiased (with respect to annotated features within the loci) and spanned from 50 kilobasepairs (kbps) upstream of both regions to 50 kbps downstream of IgH and 100 kbps downstream of MYC. Results: We performed targeted sequencing of 96 CD138-enriched samples derived from MM patients, as well as matched peripheral blood leukocyte normal controls. Sequencing depth (mean 107X) was commensurate with that of available exome sequencing data from these samples (mean 71X). Samples harbored a mean of 25 non-silent variants, including those in known MM-associated genes: NRAS (24%), KRAS (22%), FAM46C (17%), TP53 (10%), DIS3 (8%), and BRAF (3%). Variants detected by both platforms showed a strong correlation (r^2 = 0.8). The capture array detected activating, oncogenic variants in NRAS Q61K (n=3 patients) and KRAS G12C/D/R/V (n=5) that were not detected in exome data. Additionally, we found non-silent, capture-specific variants in MTOR (3%) and in two transcription-related genes that have been previously implicated in cancer: ZFHX4 (5%) and CHD3 (5%). To assess the potential role of deep subclonal variants and our ability to detect them, we performed additional sequencing (mean 565X) on six of the tumor/normal pairs. This revealed 14 manually-reviewed, non-silent variants that were not detected by the initial targeted sequencing. These had a mean variant allele frequency of 2.8% and included mutations in DNMT3A and FAM46C. At least one of these 14 variants occurred in five of the six re-sequenced samples. This highlights the importance of this additional depth, which will be used in future studies. Our approach successfully detected CNAs near expected frequencies, including hyperdiploidy (52%), del(13) (43%), and gain of 1q (35%). Similarly, it inferred IgH translocations at expected frequencies: t(4;14) (14%), t(6;14) (3%), t(11;14) (15%), and t(14;20) (1%). As expected, translocations occur predominantly within the IgH constant region, but also frequently 5' (i.e., telomeric) of the IGHM switch region, and occasionally within the V and D regions. We detected MYC -associated translocations, whose frequencies have been the subject of debate, at 10% (n=9 patients), with five involving IgH, three having both partners in or near MYC, and one having both types. Finally, our platform detected novel IgH translocations with partners near DERL3 (n=2), MYCN (n=1), and FLT3 (n=1). Additional evidence suggests that DERL3 and MYCN may be targets of IgH-induced overexpression: of 84 RNA-seq patient samples, six exhibited outlying expression of DERL3, including one sample in which we detected the translocation in corresponding DNA, and one exhibited outlying expression of MYCN. Conclusion: Our MM-specific targeted sequencing strategy is capable of detecting deeply subclonal SNVs, in addition to CNAs and IgH and MYC translocations. Though additional validation is required, particularly with respect to translocation detection, we anticipate that such technology will soon enable clinical testing on a single sequencing platform. Disclosures Vij: Celgene, Onyx, Takeda, Novartis, BMS, Sanofi, Janssen, Merck: Consultancy; Takeda, Onyx: Research Funding.


1994 ◽  
Vol 48 (7) ◽  
pp. 1327-1339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronique W.T.Ruiz Van Haperen ◽  
Gijsbert Veerman ◽  
Epie Boven ◽  
Paul Noordhuis ◽  
Jan B. Vermorken ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 643-643
Author(s):  
Meng Li ◽  
Ying-Ling Chiang ◽  
Costas Lyssiotis ◽  
Matthew Teater ◽  
Hao Shen ◽  
...  

Abstract Understanding the molecular basis of therapy-resistant DLBCL is a critical unmet need. We explored whether the family of Sirtuin proteins might contribute to such effects. Analysis of four independent clinically annotated patient cohorts revealed that higher SIRT3 expression was linked to inferior outcome (p=4.7e-5). This was not the case for any other of the sirtuins. SIRT3 mRNA and protein expression were also much higher in DLBCL patients as compared to normal germinal center (GC) B-cells. Among the seven sirtuins, only SIRT3 depletion universally suppressed proliferation, induced cell cycle arrest, suppressed colony formation, and induced apoptosis in a large panel of DLBCL cell lines regardless of cell of origin, OxPhos status, or somatic mutation profiles. Constitutive Sirt3-/- mice manifested completely normal GC formation after T-cell dependent antigen immunization. However SIRT3 depleted human DLBCL cells manifested inferior engraftment and tumor formation in mice (p=0.023 for hairpin#1, p=0.045 for hairpin#2). Sirt3 inducible knockdown caused strong regression of established DLBCL xenografts. We examined whether SIRT3 was important in lymphoma initiation by crossing VavP-Bcl2 mice with Sirt3-/- animals. As compared to VavP-Bcl2 controls, the VavP-Bcl2/Sirt3-/- mice manifested significantly longer overall survival (P=0.0035), and greatly reduced tumor burden and systemic lymphoma infiltration of organs. SIRT3 is exclusively localized to mitochondria and hence its actions are likely metabolic. We therefore performed metabolomic profiling in SIRT 3 depleted DLBCL cell lines. This analysis revealed profound suppression of the TCA (tricarboxylic acid) cycle, with reduced TCA metabolites such as citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, fumarate, malate, etc. SIRT3 depletion caused significant reduction in acetyl-CoA pools as measured by solid phase extraction and LC-MS, indicating that SIRT3 is required to maintain the production of key metabolic intermediates from the TCA cycle. To define the nature of the TCA defect we performed metabolic tracing studies using 13C-labeled glutamine and glucose. The results revealed that SIRT3 drives the TCA cycle through glutaminolysis. We showed that SIRT3 mediates this effect by directly deacetylating and hence hyper-activating the enzymatic activity of mitochondrial glutamine dehydrogenase (GDH). Indeed GDH overexpression could fully rescue the collapse of the TCA, cell proliferation arrest and apoptosis induced by SIRT3 depletion. SIRT3 knockdown was also rescued by feeding cells DMKG (which mimics alpha-ketoglutarate) and hence bypasses the need for SIRT3 mediated glutaminolysis. Because SIRT3 depletion caused metabolic collapse, DLBCL cells manifested potent induction of autophagy, as shown by ratios of LC3II/LC3I in DLBCL cells and using a mCherry-EGFP-LC3 reporter to measure autophagic flux. This autophagy effect was rescued by feeding cells with DMKG or by overexpressing GDH, which uncouple the TCA cycle from SIRT3 dependency. Notably the ratio of LC3II/LCI and perturbed autophagy flux was also Increased in lymphoma cells from VavP-Bcl2;sirt3-/- vs. VavP-Bcl2;sirt3+/+ mice. These data nominate SIRT3 as a putative therapeutic target. Therefore we designed a nanomolar-potency SIRT3 selective small molecule inhibitor including a mitochondrial-targeting motif that concentrates drug in the mitochondrial matrix. This compound (called YC8-02), phenocopied all the effects of SIRT3 depletion including proliferation arrest, apoptosis, TCA collapse by metabolomics study, hyperacetylation of mitochondrial proteins, suppression of GDH activity, and induction of autophagy. Yet YC8-02 had no effect on normal B-cells. Moreover, YC8-02 treatment of chemotherapy resistant DLBCL cell lines restored their sensitivity to clinically relevant doxorubicin concentrations. In summary, SIRT3 is a novel metabolic oncoprotein widely required for DLBCL cells to satisfy their metabolic needs by enhancing the activity of the TCA cycle through glutaminolysis. SIRT3 is a crucial new therapeutic vulnerability especially impactful for the most resistant DLBCLs regardless of their somatic mutations. YC8-02 and its newer derivatives are a promising and entirely new mechanism-based approach to help these patients. Disclosures Cerchietti: Leukemia and Lymphoma Society: Research Funding; Lymphoma Research Foundation: Research Funding; Weill Cornell Medicine - New York Presbyterian Hospital: Employment; Celgene: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4703-4703
Author(s):  
Lyndsey Flanagan ◽  
Michael E. O'Dwyer ◽  
Philip Murphy ◽  
John Quinn ◽  
Siobhan Glavey ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple Myeloma (MM) is a haematological malignancy characterised by clonal proliferation of plasma cells within the bone marrow (Landgren and Weiss, 2009). Unfortunately, despite the major improvements to the treatment of MM within the last decade, it remains an incurable disease. Therefore, novel innovative combinations of less toxic therapies are warranted, especially for elderly patients with relapsed/refractory disease. The anti-apoptotic BCL-2 family of proteins (BCL-2, BCL-XL and MCL-1) are critical regulators of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway and determine the survival of human MM cells (Letai et al., 2004, Del Gaizo Moore et al., 2008). Recently, Venetoclax, a selective BCL-2 inhibitor, was FDA approved for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and acute mylogenous leukemia (AML), in combination with demethylating agents (Roberts et al., 2016, DiNardo et al., 2018, DiNardo et al., 2019) It is known that some MM patients with t(11;14) have a good response to combination treatment with venetoclax, however certain patients who do not have t(11;14) also respond to venetoclax. Therefore, a biomarker for response is urgently required in MM, as it has heterogeneous anti-apoptotic dependencies. In AML, venetoclax is combined with the epigenetic modifier 5-azacytidine. Highlighting, that screening for epigenetic modifier's, maybe a useful approach to identify synergistic combination of treatments with venetoclax in MM. Methods: To assess anti-apoptotic protein dependence in MM cell lines (JJN3, RPMI-8226, KMS18, MM1S, U266) and primary patient samples, BH3 profiling was used. Briefly, cells are exposed to a series of BH3-only peptides (20-23 mer in length) following gentle permeabilisation of cell membrane with low concentrations of digitonin. The loss of mitochondrial potential (JC-1) or the release of cytochrome c (cytochrome-c-FITC antibody) was assessed by plate reader or by flow cytometry. Cell death was assessed by Annexin V/ propidium iodide staining by flow cytometry. Using primary patient samples, CD138 + cells were isolated using the Miltenyi MAC sorter. For the epigenetic screen cell viability was assessed by CellTiter-Glo® and death was then confirmed by Annexin V/Pi staining. Results BH3 profiling was used to assess anti-apoptotic dependence in a panel of five MM cell lines. It is a functional assay that interrogates BCL-2 protein interactions using synthetic BH3 peptides to measure the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. The BH3 profiling was correlated to the response of the cell lines to a series of BH3 mimetics : venetoclax (selective BCL-2 inhibitor), ABT-263 (BCL-2, BCL-XL and BCL-W inhibitor), WEHI-539 (BCL-XL inhibitor) and AMG-176 (MCL-1 inhibitor). This data highlighted that BH3 profiling is a powerful tool for identifying anti-apoptotic dependnece in MM. It also showed and that there is a diverse anti-apoptotic dependence in MM cell lines and primary patient samples. Remarkably, one patient with plasma cell leukemia showed BCL-2 dependence by BH3 profiling, a t(11:14) translocation and a sustained in-vivo single agent response to venetoclax (Glavey et al., 2020).. Next, we performed an unbiased epigenetic modifier screen in two MM cell lines JJN3 (MCL-1 dependent cell lines) and KMS-18 (mixed anti-apoptotic dependence) to induce BCL-2 dependence and sensitivity to venetoclax. The screen included the following classes of epigenetic modifiers: histone deacetylase inhibitors, histone methyltransferase inhibitors, DNA methyltransferase inhibitors and histone acetylase inhibitors. Interestingly, two classes of epigenetic drugs were synergistic with venetoclax in three different MM cell lines (CI &lt;0.8). The combination was also validated by dynamic BH3 profiling in cell lines MM patient samples ex-vivo. Further work is required, in the form of a clinical trial, to validate our hypothesis that this provides a highly effective novel combination therapy option for myeloma patients. Conclusion. BH3 profiling is a powerful tool to identify the anti-apoptotic dependence in MM cell lines and MM patient samples, which we can exploit pharmacologically to kill MM cells in a personalised medicine approach. Combining epigenetic modifiers with venetoclax induces BCL-2 dependence in MM and enhances response to treatment. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Flanagan: AbbVie: Research Funding. O'Dwyer: Bristol Myers Squibb: Research Funding; ONK Therapeutics: Current Employment, Current equity holder in publicly-traded company, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Janssen: Consultancy. Quinn: Takeda: Honoraria. Glavey: Janssen: Honoraria, Research Funding; Celgene and BMS company: Research Funding; Abbvie: Research Funding; Amgen: Honoraria, Research Funding. Ni Chonghaile: AbbVie: Research Funding.


2011 ◽  
Vol 29 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 390-390
Author(s):  
J. Luka ◽  
P. M. Arlen ◽  
J. A. Bristol

390 Background: An ELISA was developed using NPC-1C, a novel antibody that reacts with an antigen expressed specifically by human colorectal and pancreatic tumor tissues and cell lines. The target antigen that NPC-1C recognizes was shown to be related to MUC5AC, a member of the mucin family of glycoproteins. NPC-1C reacts with neither normal tissues from healthy donors (rare, weak binding to normal colon and esophagus), nor cell lines derived from other tumor types, thereby providing the basis for a proof of concept comparative evaluation with stool from normal healthy donors. Methods: An ELISA that uses NPC-1C antibody as both capture and detection reagent was developed. Samples of stool collected during colonoscopy from colorectal cancer patients (n = 4), stool from people with small polyps (n = 4), stool from people with multiple polyps (n = 2), stool from people with large polyps (n = 3), and stool from healthy adults (n = 13) were applied to the ELISA. A soluble extract of stool was prepared by detergent lysis and centrifugation. The level of NPC-1C-specific MUC5AC antigen measured in this ELISA was compared among all groups. Results: Preliminary results demonstrated that healthy people did not express NPC-1C antigen in their stool. The signal in the assay was similar to background levels (average 723 units). In contrast, people with small polyps had higher levels (average 3,819 units); people with multiple polyps expressed higher levels (average 7,369 units); people with large polyps had even higher levels (average 10,189 units); and colon cancer patients had the highest levels (average 175,983 units), more than 240 times the level of MUC5AC-related antigen compared with healthy people. Conclusions: The proof of concept has been established to correlate the level of NPC-1C reactive antigen, measured by a novel stool-based ELISA, with colon cancer disease progression. The level of NPC-1C-specific MUC5AC detected increased concomitantly with the number and size of polyps observed during colonoscopy, and reached the highest levels in patients with colon cancer. Our goal is to apply this ELISA test for early noninvasive diagnostic screening for colorectal cancer, an area of still largely unmet need. [Table: see text]


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