Abstract 69P
Background
Cripto-1 (CR1) is an oncofetal protein required for implantation and expressed in the adult during wound repair, inflammation, and tumorigenesis. A second gene codes for a very homologous protein, Cripto-3 (CR3). Both proteins contain 188 amino acids and differ only in 6 residues. Heretofore, all available antibodies cannot discriminate between these two proteins, preventing any investigation on their differential contributions to cancer biology. Here, we present the generation, characterization, and clinical implications of highly specific monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) for these two proteins.
Methods
Different peptide fragments of either protein were used as antigens to generate mouse MoAbs (233 clones for CR1, 319 clones for CR3) that were selected by their target protein specificity through SPR and ELISA assays. Selected MoAbs were used for immunohistochemistry on tissue arrays including normal tissues as well as cancers of the lung, breast, colon, ovary, and prostate. MoAbs were also used for Western blotting and ELISA characterization of human serum (breast cancer vs healthy controls).
Results
MoAbs NCI 5G1-1 and NCI 5G11-2 were highly specific for CR1 and CR3, respectively. No crossreactivity was observed with the other protein. Immunohistochemical analysis of cancer specimens showed differential staining patterns, where some tumor cells expressed both proteins, others expressed only CR3, and still others show vascular endothelial cells stained for CR1 while tumor cells express CR3. In prostate, colon, and breast cancer, CR1 and/or CR3 protein expression correlates with clinical parameters, such as TMN_N, TMN_M, tumor stage, tumor grade, or PR expression. Lastly, both CR1 and CR3 interact with established binding proteins Nodal, GRP78 and Alk4 and competitively interfere with one another for targeted binding.
Conclusions
We describe for the first time the development of MoAbs that discriminate human CR1 from CR3, confirming that CR3 is translated into a protein in human cells, thus removing its pseudogene status. We also confirm CR1, and propose CR3, as cancer prognosis and severity markers.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Center for Biomedical Research of La Rioja (CIBIR), Logroño, Spain.
Funding
Center for Biomedical Research of La Rioja (CIBIR), Logroño, Spain.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
24P - Single cell transcriptomics of the immune cells during chemotherapy in triple-negative breast cancer patients
Presenter: Anastasia Frolova
Session: Poster session 09
25P - Role of AXL activation on adaptive resistance to KRAS-G12C inhibitors in KRAS-G12C-mutated non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Tadaaki Yamada
Session: Poster session 09
26P - Pre-clinical modelling and treatment of BRAF mutated colorectal cancer
Presenter: Mark White
Session: Poster session 09
27P - Extending a classification system for atypical BRAF mutations to improve targeted therapies in colorectal cancer cells
Presenter: Abhinav Madduri
Session: Poster session 09
28P - Xanthine oxidase as a prognostic factor in colorectal cancer metastatic disease
Presenter: Anton Burlaka
Session: Poster session 09
29P - The effect of cancer associated fibroblast-derived activin A on colorectal cancer progression
Presenter: Simone Stang
Session: Poster session 09
30P - Prostaglandin signaling in tumour stroma interaction in colorectal cancer and its impact on the secretome and functional relevance
Presenter: Mario Macia-Guardado
Session: Poster session 09
31P - Cell-free tumor microRNA as early biomarkers of high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia using liquid biopsy
Presenter: Stéphanie Calfa
Session: Poster session 09
32P - Epigenetic reprogramming induced prostaglandin E2 accumulation via overactivated arachidonic acid metabolism during trastuzumab resistance formation of HER2-positive breast cancer
Presenter: yongmei yin
Session: Poster session 09
33P - Visualizing trastuzumab-deruxtecan action in HER2+ breast cancer cells at nanoscale
Presenter: Katia Cortese
Session: Poster session 09