International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2020)

Cyclic Peptide Mimotopes for the Detection of Serum Anti–ATIC Autoantibody Biomarker in Hepato-Cellular Carcinoma

  • Chang-Kyu Heo,
  • Hai-Min Hwang,
  • Won-Hee Lim,
  • Hye-Jung Lee,
  • Jong-Shin Yoo,
  • Kook-Jin Lim,
  • Eun-Wie Cho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21249718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 24
p. 9718

Abstract

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Tumor-associated (TA) autoantibodies have been identified at the early tumor stage before developing clinical symptoms, which holds hope for early cancer diagnosis. We identified a TA autoantibody from HBx-transgenic (HBx-tg) hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) model mouse, characterized its target antigen, and examined its relationship to human HCC. The mimotopes corresponding to the antigenic epitope of TA autoantibody were screened from a random cyclic peptide library and used for the detection of serum TA autoantibody. The target antigen of the TA autoantibody was identified as an oncogenic bi-functional purine biosynthesis protein, ATIC. It was upregulated in liver cancer tissues of HBx-tg mouse as well as human HCC tissues. Over-expressed ATIC was also secreted extracellularly via the cancer-derived exosomes, which might cause auto-immune responses. The cyclic peptide mimotope with a high affinity to anti-ATIC autoantibody, CLPSWFHRC, distinguishes between serum samples from HCC patients and healthy subjects with 70.83% sensitivity, 90.68% specificity (AUC = 0.87). However, the recombinant human ATIC protein showed a low affinity to anti-ATIC autoantibody, which may be incompatible as a capture antigen for serum TA autoantibody. This study indicates that anti-ATIC autoantibody can be a potential HCC-associated serum biomarker and suggests that autoantibody biomarker’s efficiency can be improved by using antigenic mimicry to native antigens present in vivo.

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