Breast Gross Cystic Disease Fluid Analysis. I. Isolation and Radioimmunoassay for a Major Component Protein

Abstract
Human breast gross cystic disease (GCD) fluid was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis, and four major proteins (GCDFP-70, GCDFP-44, GCDFP-24, and GCDFP-15) were identified. By fractionation techniques, these proteins were separated from one another. The GCDFP-70 was immunologically identical to human albumin and was present in GCD fluid at approximately a 100-fold lower concentration than in plasma. The GCDFP-44 was immunologically identical to human plasma Zn-alpha2-glycoprotein; however, it was present in GCD fluid at an approximately 50-fold higher concentration than in plasma. The GCDFP-24 was the major component protein of GCD fluid. It had progesterone binding activity, and immunologically it was identical to a component of human plasma; however, antisera that identified 30 separate components of plasma failed to identify the GCDFP-24 as one of these plasma proteins. The GCDFP-24 concentration in GCD fluid was approximately 100-fold higher than the plasma analog. The GCDFP-15 component was immunologically distinct from any plasma components, as judged by Ouchterlony analysis. It was, however, immunologically identical with a component of both human milk and saliva. As revealed by radioimmunoassay, plasma levels in normal subjects were 7-85 ng/ml. In patients with metastatic breast carcinoma, markedly increased plasma levels (150-30,000 ng/ml) of this protein were detected. Short-term tissue cultures of breast carcinoma explants released this protein into the culture medium.

This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: