| Literature DB >> 19591665 |
Mohamed Ss Alhamdani1, Christoph Schröder, Jörg D Hoheisel.
Abstract
The incidence of cancer and its associated mortality are increasing globally, indicating an urgent need to develop even more effective and sensitive sets of biomarkers that could help in early diagnosis and consequent intervention. Given that many cellular processes are carried out by proteins, cancer research has recently shifted toward an exploration of the full proteome for such discovery. Among the advanced methodologies that are being developed for analyzing the proteome, antibody microarrays have become a prominent tool for gathering the information required for a better understanding of disease biology, early detection, discrimination of tumors and monitoring of disease progression. Here, we review the technical aspects and challenges in the development and use of antibody microarray assays and examine recently reported applications in oncoproteomics.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19591665 PMCID: PMC2717394 DOI: 10.1186/gm68
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the basic processes of analyzing protein extracts on antibody microarrays. Although many details such as the binder type, the protein labeling, the surface structure of the solid support or the detection procedure may change considerably, the principal components and steps of the assay remain the same.
Application of antibody microarrays in cancer research
| Cancer type | Sample source | Assay platform | Number of antibodies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angiogenesis | Cell line | ProteoChip | 60 | [ |
| Bladder | Human sera | Nitrocellulose FAST slides | 254 | [ |
| Breast | Cell line, human sera and tissue | Hypromatrix, RayBio, Proteome Profiler, MaxiSorp slide, nitrocellulose membrane, Panorama cell signaling, BD antibody microarray 380 | 400, 174, 42, 129, 312, 224, 378 | [ |
| Colon | Cell line | Poly- | 146 | [ |
| Colorectal | Human tissue, cell line | Lab Vision, Panorama cell signaling | 720, 224 | [ |
| Gastric | Human sera | Lab Vision | 720 | [ |
| Intestinal | Mouse sera | Nitrocellulose-coated slides | 40 | [ |
| Leukemia | Human sera | DotScan | 82 | [ |
| Liver | Human tissue, cell line | Hypromatrix | 400 | [ |
| Lung | Human sera and exhaled breath condensate, cell line | Cytokine antibody array VI+VII, Panorama cell signaling, Nitrocellulose-coated slides | 120, 224, 84 | [ |
| Melanoma | Cell line | RayBio | 174 | [ |
| Ovarian | Human sera | Hydrogel-coated glass slides | 320 | [ |
| Pancreatic | Human sera | Nitrocellulose-coated slides, MaxiSorp slide | 129, 48, 90 | [ |
| Prostate | Cell line, human sera and prostate fluid | Phosphorylation antibody array, RayBio, hydrogels or poly- | 71, 174, 184, 86 | [ |
| Renal | Human sera | RayBio | 20 | [ |