High-affinity antibodies from hen's-egg yolks against human mannose-6-phosphate/insulin-like growth-factor-II receptor (M6P/IGFII-R): Characterization and potential use in clinical cancer studies
Abstract
The mannose-6-phosphate/insulin-like growth-factor-II receptor (M6P/IGFII-R) involved in trafficking of newly synthesized lysosomal enzymes, degradation of IGFII and activation of TGFβ1, was suggested as being coded by a tumor-suppressor gene. No specific antibodies are currently available for clinical studies. Since M6P/IGFII-R is a highly conserved protein in mammals, we immunized chicken with human M6P/IGFII-R. Up to 200 mg of specific IgY from weekly pooled egg yolk was extracted by the polyethylene glycol procedure. Chicken IgY antibodies specifically recognized the human and bovine 270-kDa M6P/IGFII-R but not the 46-kDa M6P-R, as documented by immunoprecipitation and immunobloting. Using biosensor analysis, IgY antibodies were shown to bind M6P/IGFII-R with high affinity (KD = 7.5 × 10−9M). A solid-phase competitive ELISA using bovine M6P/IGFII-R coated on 96-well microplates, allowed us to titrate the M6P/IGFII-R in human sera at a sensitivity of 300 ng/ml. The M6P/IGFII-R was stained by immunoperoxidase in breast- and ovarian-cancer cell lines (T47D, MDA-MB231, MCF7 and BG1) and in frozen breast-cancer tissues, showing predominant localization in the trans-Golgi network. Staining specificity was shown with irrelevant IgY and by extinction with antigen excess. Quantitative immunohistochemical analysis of frozen sections from 40 invasive breast carcinomas indicated varying levels (from 5 to 400 units) of the M6P/IGFII-R protein which were not correlated with tumor size, histological grade and estrogen receptor or progesterone receptor. There was a trend (p = 0.08) between lymph-node invasiveness and low receptor level. Moreover, the M6P/IGFII-R level was significantly lower in cancer cells than in normal cells in 10 out of the 21 tumors in which the peritumoral normal glands could be quantified in parallel. These 2 last results agree with the hypothesis of a tumor-suppressor gene for this receptor and suggest more basic and clinical studies to prove it. Int. J. Cancer 80:896–902, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.