| Literature DB >> 23460885 |
Sarah Shigdar1, Christine Qian, Li Lv, Chunwen Pu, Yong Li, Lianhong Li, Manju Marappan, Jia Lin, Lifen Wang, Wei Duan.
Abstract
EpCAM is expressed at low levels in a variety of normal human epithelial tissues, but is overexpressed in 70-90% of carcinomas. From a clinico-pathological point of view, this has both prognostic and therapeutic significance. EpCAM was first suggested as a therapeutic target for the treatment of epithelial cancers in the 1990s. However, following several immunotherapy trials, the results have been mixed. It has been suggested that this is due, at least in part, to an unknown level of EpCAM expression in the tumors being targeted. Thus, selection of patients who would benefit from EpCAM immunotherapy by determining EpCAM status in the tumor biopsies is currently undergoing vigorous evaluation. However, current EpCAM antibodies are not robust enough to be able to detect EpCAM expression in all pathological tissues. Here we report a newly developed EpCAM RNA aptamer, also known as a chemical antibody, which is not only specific but also more sensitive than current antibodies for the detection of EpCAM in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded primary breast cancers. This new aptamer, together with our previously described aptamer, showed no non-specific staining or cross-reactivity with tissues that do not express EpCAM. They were able to reliably detect target proteins in breast cancer xenograft where an anti-EpCAM antibody (323/A3) showed limited or no reactivity. Our results demonstrated a more robust detection of EpCAM using RNA aptamers over antibodies in clinical samples with chromogenic staining. This shows the potential of aptamers in the future of histopathological diagnosis and as a tool to guide targeted immunotherapy.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23460885 PMCID: PMC3584034 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Clinical Details of Breast Tumor Cases.
| Patient | Size of thetumor (cm) | Pathologicaldiagnosis | Numbers ofnodes involved | Clinico-pathologicstage | T | N | M |
| 1 | 8 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 1 | 3a | 3 | 1 | 0 |
| 2 | 4 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 8 | 3a | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| 3 | 5 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 7 | 3c | 4 | 3 | 0 |
| 4 | 6.5 | mucinous carcinoma | 2 | 3a | 3 | 1 | 0 |
| 5 | 2 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 23 | 3c | 1 | 3 | 0 |
| 6 | 10 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 43 | 3c | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| 7 | 3 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 0 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| 8 | 1 | invasive ductal carcinoma | 17 | 3c | 1 | 3 | 0 |
Note: ‘T’: Tumor; N: Node; M: Metastasis.
Figure 1Detection of EpCAM in paraffin embedded tissue using aptamers and antibodies.
Immunofluorescence staining of breast cancer (T47D, MCF7 and MDA-MB-231), colon cancer (HT-29) and glioblastoma (U118MG) xenograft tumors by EpCAM antibody, 323/A3, and EpCAM aptamers, DT3 and Ep23, and control aptamer (Blue: nuclei; Red: EpCAM positive staining). Aptamer staining was performed for 15 min at 37°C, while 323/A3 staining was performed at 4°C overnight. All fluorescent images were taken under a confocal microscope with×60 magnification. Images are representative of at least three separate experiments. Scale bar: 50 µm.
Quantification of anti-EpCAM staining in cell line xenografts using DT3, Ep23 and control aptamers and 323/A3 antibody by immunofluorescence.
| Cell Lines | |||||
| T47D | MCF7 | MDA-MB-231 | HT-29 | U118MG | |
| 323/A3 Antibody | 1+ | 1+ | − | 2+/3+ | − |
| DT3 Aptamer | 2+ | 1+ | 1+ | − | − |
| Ep23 Aptamer | 3+ | 2+ | 1+ | 3+ | − |
| Control Aptamer | − | − | − | − | − |
‘−’ no staining; ‘+’ faint incomplete staining (negative); ‘++’ moderate complete membrane staining (equivocal); ‘+++’ strong complete membrane staining (positive) [45].
Immunostaining Comparison of EpCAM Antibody and Aptamer.
| Breast Tumor | Lymph Node | |||
| Case Number | Antibody Staining | Aptamer Staining | Antibody Staining | Aptamer Staining |
|
| 2+ | 3+ | 1+/2+ | 2+ |
|
| 0 | 2+ | 0 | 1+/2+ |
|
| 0 | 2+/3+ | 1+ | 2+ |
|
| 0/1+ | 2+ | No Tumor | 1+/2+ |
|
| 0 | 2+/3+ | 0 | 1+/2+ |
|
| 0 | 2+/3+ | 1+ | 1+/2+ |
|
| 3+ | 2+ | 1+ | 1+/2+ |
|
| 0 | 2+ | 0 | 1+/2+ |
‘−’ no staining; ‘+’ faint incomplete staining (negative); ‘++’ moderate complete membrane staining (equivocal); ‘+++’ strong complete membrane staining (positive) [45].
Figure 2Tissue immunostaining of breast cancer and lymph node metastasis by EpCAM antibody and aptamer.
A – H: EpCAM antibody immunostaining was weaker in both the breast tumor (A (× 40), B (× 400) and lymph node (E (× 40), F (× 400) in comparison to EpCAM aptamer immunostaining in patient 1 (Breast tumor C (×40), D (×400); and lymph node G (× 40), H (× 400); I – P No immunostaining was observed with the EpCAM antibody in the breast tumor (I (× 40), J (× 400) or the lymph node (M (× 40), N (× 400)) while the EpCAM aptamer showed a strong positive signal in both the breast (K (× 40), L (× 400)) and lymph node (O (× 40), P (× 400)) in patient 5; Q – X Immunostaining with EpCAM antibody was stronger in the breast tumor (Q (× 40), R (× 400)) but not the lymph node (U (× 40), V (× 400)) than the EpCAM aptamer (Breast tumor S (× 40), T (× 400); and lymph node W (× 40), X (× 400)) in patient 7; Y – AB Representative images of negative control tissues. Patient 4 showed negative areas of lymphocyte staining within the lymph node by EpCAM antibody (Y (× 400)) and EpCAM aptamer (Z (× 400)); Patient 2 showed normal regions of lymph node that was negative by EpCAM aptamer (AA (× 400)); Normal liver sample negative for EpCAM by EpCAM aptamer (AB (× 400)). All pictures were taken under a light microscope with × 40 magnification and × 400 magnification (taken from the center of the × 40 magnification).