Early detection and monitoring of cancer progression is key to successful treatment. Therefore, much research is invested in developing technologies, enabling effective and valuable use of non-invasive liquid biopsies. This includes the detection and analysis of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from blood samples. Recombinant malaria protein VAR2CSA (rVAR2) binds a unique chondroitin sulfate modification present on the vast majority of cancers and thereby holds promise as a near-universal tumor cell-targeting reagent to isolate CTCs from complex blood samples. This study describes a technical approach for optimizing the coupling of rVAR2 to magnetic beads and the development of a CTC isolation platform targeting a range of different cancer cell lines. We investigate both direct and indirect approaches for rVAR2-mediated bead retrieval of cancer cells and conclude that an indirect capture approach is most effective for rVAR2-based cancer cell retrieval.
CITATION STYLE
Sand, N. T., Petersen, T. B., Bang-Christensen, S. R., Ahrens, T. D., Løppke, C., Jørgensen, A. M., … Agerbæk, M. (2020). Optimization of rVAR2-based isolation of cancer cells in blood for building a robust assay for clinical detection of circulating tumor cells. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 21(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21072401
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