Abstract

We have reported that a mouse monoclonal antibody 703D4, detects lung cancer 2 years earlier than routine chest x-ray or cytomorphology. We purified the 703D4 antigen to elucidate its role in early lung cancer biology, using Western blot detection after SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Purification steps included anion exchange chromatography, preparative isoelectric focusing, polymer-based C18-like, and analytical C4 reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. After 25-50,000-fold purification, the principal immunostaining protein was > 95% pure by Coomassie staining. The NH2 terminus was blocked, so CNBr digestion was used to generate internal peptides. Three sequences, including one across a site of alternate exon splicing, all identified a single protein, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein-A2 (hnRNP-A2). A minor co-purifying immunoreactive protein resolved at the final C4 high performance liquid chromatography step is the splice variant hnRNP-B1. Northern analysis of RNA from primary normal bronchial epithelial cells demonstrated a low level of hnRNP-A2/B1 expression, consistent with immunohistochemical staining of clinical samples, and increased hnRNP-A2/B1 expression was found in lung cancer cells. hnRNP-A2/B1 expression is under proliferation-dependent control in normal bronchial epithelial cell primary cultures, but not in SV40-transformed bronchial epithelial cells or tumor cell lines. With our clinical data, this information suggests that hnRNP-A2/B1 is an early marker of lung epithelial transformation and carcinogenesis.

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