Electrophoretic patterns for serum glycoproteins reflect the presence of human breast cancer.
Open Access
- 1 November 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Chemistry
- Vol. 23 (11) , 2055-2058
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/23.11.2055
Abstract
We describe a group of glycoproteins that are synthesized and released by human breast tumors maintained in organ culture and similar glycoproteins released by a human breast carcinoma cell line (BT-20). The electrophoretic mobility of these glycoproteins on cellulose acetate is consistent with increased glycoprotein-staining material present in the alpha2- to beta-globulin region of serum glycoprotein electropherograms from patients with breast cancer. Moreover, after mastectomy, this glycoprotein material in serum decreases to concentrations seen in a control population of patients with benign breast lesions. Patients with proven metastatic breast cancer have patterns reflecting their clinical status: those who respond to treatment have glycoprotein electropherograms similar to the group of patients with benign breast lesions, while those who do not have increased amounts of alpha2- beta-glycoprotein. We believe serum glycoprotein measurements in breast-cancer patients reflect the presence of glycoproteins that are released by the malignant cells and enter the circulation.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inter- and Intraspecies Contamination of Human Breast Tumor Cell Lines HBC and BrCa5 and Other Cell CulturesScience, 1977
- CASEIN PRODUCTION BY HUMAN BREAST-CANCER1977
- Plasma levels of a viral protein as a diagnostic signal for the presence of tumor : the murine mammary tumor model.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1976
- PROGNOSTICALLY SIGNIFICANT PROTEIN-COMPONENTS OF HUMAN BREAST-CANCER TISSUES1976
- α-Lactalbumin Production in Human Mammary CarcinomaScience, 1975
- SURVEY OF CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF SERUM MUCOPROTEIN LEVELArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1954