Purification and Characterization of a Protein That Permits Early Detection of Lung Cancer
IDENTIFICATION OF HETEROGENEOUS NUCLEAR RIBONUCLEOPROTEIN-A2/B1 AS THE ANTIGEN FOR MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY 703D4 (*)
- Jun Zhou,
- James L. Mulshine,
- Edward J. Unsworth,
- Frank M. Scott,
- Ingalill M. Avis,
- Michele D. Vos and
- Anthony M. Treston(§),
- From the Biomarkers and Prevention Research Branch, National Cancer Institute, Rockville, Maryland 20850-3300
- ↵§ To whom all correspondence should be addressed: Biomarkers and Prevention Research Branch, DCS, NCI, 9610 Medical Center Dr., Rm. 300, Rockville, MD 20850-3300. Tel.: 301-402-3128; Fax: 301-402-4422.
Abstract
We have reported that a mouse monoclonal antibody, 703D4, detects lung cancer 2 years earlier than routine chest x-ray or
cytomorphology. We purified the 703D4 antigen to elucidate its role in early lung cancer biology, using Western blot detection
after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Purification steps included anion exchange chromatography, preparative isoelectric
focusing, polymer-based C
-like, and analytical C
reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. After 25-50,000-fold purification, the principal immunostaining protein
was >95% pure by Coomassie staining. The NH
terminus was blocked, so CNBr digestion was used to generate internal peptides. Three sequences, including one across a site
of alternate exon splicing, all identified a single protein, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein-A2 (hnRNP-A2). A minor
co-purifying immunoreactive protein resolved at the final C
high performance liquid chromatography step is the splice variant hnRNP-B1. Northern analysis of RNA from primary normal
bronchial epithelial cells demonstrated a low level of hnRNP-A2/B1 expression, consistent with immunohistochemical staining
of clinical samples, and increased hnRNP-A2/B1 expression was found in lung cancer cells. hnRNP-A2/B1 expression is under
proliferation-dependent control in normal bronchial epithelial cell primary cultures, but not in SV40-transformed bronchial
epithelial cells or tumor cell lines. With our clinical data, this information suggests that hnRNP-A2/B1 is an early marker
of lung epithelial transformation and carcinogenesis.
Footnotes
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↵* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
- Received November 13, 1995.
- Revision received February 17, 1996.
- © 1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











