Peptidomic analysis of breast cancer reveals a putative surrogate marker for estrogen receptor-negative carcinomas.
Traub. Frank F; Jost. Marco M; Hess. Rüdiger R; Schorn. Karl K; Menzel. Christoph C; Budde. Petra P; Schulz-Knappe. Peter P; Lamping. Norbert N; Pich. Andreas A; Kreipe. Hans H; Tammen. Harald H
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels are up‑regulated in estrogen‑receptor‑negative breast tumors and down‑regulated in estrogen‑receptor‑positive tumors
- The peptide was the most specific marker distinguishing the two tumor groups in the study
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 may serve as a surrogate biomarker for ER status, reflecting underlying hormone signaling pathways
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this finding isn’t immediately actionable; it points to a potential diagnostic tool rather than a supplement or lifestyle change. Until a simple test or therapeutic link is developed, it’s mainly of scientific interest rather than a protocol to adopt.
Summary
Researchers found that a small protein called thymosin‑alpha‑1 is higher in breast cancers that lack estrogen receptors and lower in those that have them, suggesting it could help identify the cancer type, but this doesn’t translate into a direct health‑boosting or anti‑cancer strategy for everyday use.
Abstract
Estrogen-receptor status provides a major biomarker in breast cancer classification and has an important impact on prognosis and treatment options. The aim of this study was to investigate peptide profiles of invasive breast cancer with positive (n=39) and negative receptor status (n=41). Peptide profiles were generated by 'Differential Peptide Display', which is an offline-coupled combination of reversed-phase-HPLC and MALDI mass spectrometry. Mass spectrometric data were correlated with the immunohistochemically determined receptor state. Identification of peptides of interest was carried out by additional mass spectrometric methods (eg MALDI-TOF-TOF-MS-MS). Approximately 3000-7000 signals were detected per sample and thymosin alpha-1, an asparaginyl endopeptidase generated cleavage product of the ubiquitous acidic protein prothymosin-alpha, was found to differentiate the tumor samples according to their receptor status with the highest specificity. The concentration of Thymosin alpha-1 was found to be upregulated (n=37) in estrogen-negative cancer samples and downregulated (n=32) in estrogen-positive breast cancer samples. The expression of the precursor protein (Prothymosin-alpha) has been discussed previously as a prognostic factor in breast cancer. It is involved in the ER signal transduction pathway as an anti-coactivator-inhibitor. From our findings we conclude that Thymosin alpha-1 could serve as a surrogate marker in breast cancers and may indicate ER functionality.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-03-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/labinvest.3700385
40
28