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Title:

Elevated circulating Hsp70 levels are correlative for malignancies in different mammalian species.

Document type:
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Author(s):
Salvermoser, Lukas; Flisikowski, Krzysztof; Dressel-Böhm, Susann; Nytko, Katarzyna J; Rohrer Bley, Carla; Schnieke, Angelika; Samt, Ann-Kathrin; Thölke, Dennis; Lennartz, Philipp; Schwab, Melissa; Wang, Fei; Bashiri Dezfouli, Ali; Multhoff, Gabriele
Abstract:
Circulating Hsp70 levels were determined in feline and porcine cohorts using two different ELISA systems. These comparative animal models of larger organisms often reflect diseases, and especially malignant tumors, better than conventional rodent models. It is therefore essential to investigate the biology and utility of tumor biomarkers in animals such as cats and pigs. In this study, levels of free Hsp70 in the blood of cats with spontaneously occurring tumors were detected using a commercial Hsp70 ELISA (R&D Systems). Sub-analysis of different tumor groups revealed that animals with tumors of epithelial origin presented with significantly elevated circulating Hsp70 concentrations. In addition to free Hsp70 levels measured with the R&D Systems Hsp70 ELISA, levels of exosomal Hsp70 were determined using the compHsp70 ELISA in pigs. Both ELISA systems detected significantly elevated Hsp70 levels (R&D Systems: median 24.9 ng/mL; compHsp70: median 44.2 ng/mL) in the blood of a cohort of APC1311/+ pigs diagnosed with high-grade adenoma polyps, and the R&D Systems Hsp70 ELISA detected also elevated Hsp70 levels in animals with low-grade polyps. In contrast, in flTP53R167H pigs, suffering from malignant osteosarcoma, the compHsp70 ELISA (median 674.32 ng/mL), but not the R&D Systems Hsp70 ELISA (median 4.78 ng/mL), determined significantly elevated Hsp70 concentrations, indicating that in tumor-bearing animals, the dominant form of Hsp70 is of exosomal origin. Our data suggest that both ELISA systems are suitable for detecting free circulating Hsp70 levels in pigs with high-grade adenoma, but only the compHsp70 ELISA can measure elevated, tumor-derived exosomal Hsp70 levels in tumor-bearing animals.
Journal title abbreviation:
Cell Stress Chaperones
Year:
2023
Journal volume:
28
Journal issue:
1
Pages contribution:
105-118
Fulltext / DOI:
doi:10.1007/s12192-022-01311-y
Pubmed ID:
http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36399258
Print-ISSN:
1355-8145
TUM Institution:
595; Klinik und Poliklinik für Hals-, Nasen- und Ohrenheilkunde (Prof. Wollenberg); Klinik und Poliklinik für RadioOnkologie und Strahlentherapie (Prof. Combs)
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