A putative prostate cancer marker called PC-1 has been identified in prostate cancers but not benign hyperplasia or normal prostate. Matritech scientists have produced specific anti-PC-1 monoclonal antibodies, selected by immunofluorescent nuclear antigen localization on the PC-1-positive prostate tumor cell line LNCAP and 1-D immunoblots against LNCAP-extracted nuclear matrix proteins. Following further characterization of PC-1- specific antibodies by 2-D immunoblotting on nuclear matrix extracted from prostate cancer tissue, the goal of this SBIR Phase I study is to evaluate the tissue specificity of PC-1 by immunohistochemical localization of PC-1 antigen in frozen sections of prostate tumor tissue, benign hyperplastic and normal prostate, as well as a panel of non-prostate tissues. Antibodies selected for their ability to distinguish between cancerous and benign/normal prostate tissue will be used to search for PC-1 protein in urine or serum from prostate cancer patients by two site immunoassay. If tissue localization of PC-1 can distinguish cancer patients from those with benign disease, or if PC-1 is detectable in either serum or urine, then an immunoassay based upon the detection of this protein could improve patients management or could aid in the early detection of prostate cancer.
Partin, A W; Briggman, J V; Subong, E N et al. (1997) Preliminary immunohistochemical characterization of a monoclonal antibody (PRO:4-216) prepared from human prostate cancer nuclear matrix proteins. Urology 50:800-8 |