BACKGROUND: Overexpression of the ErbB-2 (HER2/neu) receptor tyrosine kinase is one of the most common molecular changes in human cancer, but the functional significance of this phenotype remains uncertain. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using phosphorylation-specific antibodies recognizing different ErbB-2 functional states, we assessed the phosphorylation status of ErbB-2 in 102 human breast cancer specimens. Quantitative ErbB-2 immunoblotting intensity correlated directly with that of immunohistochemistry (r = 0.84). Widely varying phosphorylation profiles were evident in 65 ErbB-2-positive carcinomas, suggesting different ErbB-2 functions in different tumors. In a subset of patients for whom clinical data were obtainable, mortality trends were strongly associated with the quantitative signal intensities of ErbB-2 phosphoantibodies (P < or =.02), but not with those of conventional antibodies to ErbB-2 (P = .147), epidermal growth factor receptor (P = .44), or phosphotyrosine (P = .94). CONCLUSION: Although requiring corroboration in larger prospective clinical studies, these findings suggest that immunophenotyping using phosphorylation-specific antibodies may enable more accurate prediction of cancer behavior than is currently obtainable using conventional reagents.
BACKGROUND: Overexpression of the ErbB-2 (HER2/neu) receptor tyrosine kinase is one of the most common molecular changes in humancancer, but the functional significance of this phenotype remains uncertain. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using phosphorylation-specific antibodies recognizing different ErbB-2 functional states, we assessed the phosphorylation status of ErbB-2 in 102 humanbreast cancer specimens. Quantitative ErbB-2 immunoblotting intensity correlated directly with that of immunohistochemistry (r = 0.84). Widely varying phosphorylation profiles were evident in 65 ErbB-2-positive carcinomas, suggesting different ErbB-2 functions in different tumors. In a subset of patients for whom clinical data were obtainable, mortality trends were strongly associated with the quantitative signal intensities of ErbB-2 phosphoantibodies (P < or =.02), but not with those of conventional antibodies to ErbB-2 (P = .147), epidermal growth factor receptor (P = .44), or phosphotyrosine (P = .94). CONCLUSION: Although requiring corroboration in larger prospective clinical studies, these findings suggest that immunophenotyping using phosphorylation-specific antibodies may enable more accurate prediction of cancer behavior than is currently obtainable using conventional reagents.
Authors: Prudence B Lam; Laura N Burga; Bryan P Wu; Erin W Hofstatter; Kun Ping Lu; Gerburg M Wulf Journal: Mol Cancer Date: 2008-12-15 Impact factor: 27.401