Serum biomarkers which correlate with failure to respond to immunotherapy and tumor progression in a murine colorectal cancer model

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Abstract

Purpose: To advance our understanding of mechanisms involved in tumor progression/regression, a CT26 colorectal mouse model treated intra-tumorally with DISC-herpes simplex virus as immunotherapy was used in the discovery and validation phases to investigate and ultimately identify biomarkers correlating with the failure to respond to immunotherapy. Experimental design: For the discovery phase, serum protein/peptide profiles of a retrospective sample collection (total n=70) were analyzed using MALDI-TOF-MS combined with artificial neural networks. Following identification of the key predictive peptides using ESI-MS/MS, validation of the identified proteins was carried out on serum and tissues collected in an independent sample set (total n=60). Results: Artificial neural network analysis resulted in four discriminatory peaks with an accuracy of 86%, sensitivity of 90% and specificity of 81% between the progressor/regressor groups. Three of the identified discriminatory markers were upregulated and demonstrated a positive correlation with tumor progression following DISC-herpes simplex virus therapy. Immunovalidation studies corroborated the MALDI-TOF-MS findings. Immunohistochemistry revealed that serum amyloid A-1 and serum amyloid P produced in the liver localized intracellularly in CT26 tumor tissue. Conclusions: MALDI-TOF-MS and BI analysis of the serum proteome of tumor-bearer mice undergoing immunotherapy, identified biomarkers associating with "failure to respond" and biological arrays confirmed these findings. © 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

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Vafadar-Isfahani, B., Laversin, S. A. S., Ahmad, M., Ball, G., Coveney, C., Lemetre, C., … Matharoo-Ball, B. (2010). Serum biomarkers which correlate with failure to respond to immunotherapy and tumor progression in a murine colorectal cancer model. Proteomics - Clinical Applications, 4(8–9), 682–696. https://doi.org/10.1002/prca.200900218

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