Detection and quantification of S-100 protein in ocular tissues and fluids from patients with intraocular melanoma

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Abstract

S-100 protein is a 21000 dalton acidic calcium-binding protein present in ocular melanomas and some normal ocular tissues. Ocular fluids and extracts of ocular tumours were examined by a sensitive radioimmunoassay that could detect less than 5 ng of S-100 protein in minute volumes of fluid. Three ocular melanoma biopsy specimens had S-100 protein at levels between 25 and 1300 ng/ml, comparable to that found in a cutaneous melanoma biopsy specimen (1000 ng/ml). (SI conversion: ng/ml=μg/l.) Six melanoma culture lines had 1000 to 125 000 ng/ml. Four lymphoblastoid cultures had less than 2 ng/ml, and three colon carcinoma cultures had 180 ng/ml. Subretinal fluid from 23 melanoma-containing eyes had 10 to 76 800 ng/ml. Lesser amounts were found in eyes with small, anteriorly located, lightly pigmented tumours. Vitreous from 3 melanoma-containing eyes had 10000 to 11000 ng/ml. Vitreous obtained from three eyes during tractional retinal detachment repair had 500 to 1600 ng/ml, and vitreous obtained at necropsy from six normal eyes had 2 to 120 ng/ml. Aqueous from six melanoma-containing eyes had 10 to 30 ng/ml, levels not significantly different from those observed in three normal eyes (80-120 ng/ml). This approach provides new insight into the interaction of ocular tumours and adjacent ocular fluids and may, with more specific tumour markers, have diagnostic applications.

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Cochran, A. J., Holland, G. N., Saxton, R. E., Damato, B. E., Foulds, W. R., Herschman, H. R., … Lee, W. R. (1988). Detection and quantification of S-100 protein in ocular tissues and fluids from patients with intraocular melanoma. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 72(11), 874–879. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.72.11.874

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