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Serum biomarkers found in dogs with breast cancer like humans

By Zamani-Ahmadmahmudi, Mohamad et al.·Published in Electrophoresis·2014·Department of Clinical Pathology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Serological proteome analysis of dogs with breast cancer unveils common serum biomarkers with human counterparts.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with breast cancer had their blood tested to find specific proteins that could help diagnose the disease. Researchers discovered four proteins that were present in higher amounts in the blood of dogs with tumors compared to healthy dogs. These proteins are similar to those found in human breast cancer, suggesting that studying canine breast cancer could help us understand the disease in both dogs and humans. This research may lead to better diagnostic tools for detecting breast cancer in dogs.

People also search for: dog breast cancer symptoms · canine mammary tumor diagnosis · dog cancer blood test

Abstract

Canine mammary tumor is being touted as a model for investigating the human breast cancer. Breast cancer of the both species has similar biological behavior, histopathologic characteristics, and metastatic pattern. In this study, we used the serological proteome analysis to detect autoantigens that elicit a humoral response in dogs with mammary tumor in order to identify serum biomarkers with potential usefulness as diagnostic markers and to better understand molecular mechanisms underlying canine breast cancer development. Protein extract from a cell line was subject to 2DE followed by Western blotting using sera from 15 dogs with mammary tumor and sera from 15 healthy control dogs. Immunoreactive autoantigens were subsequently identified by the MALDI-TOF MS. Four autoantigens, including manganese-superoxide dismutase, triose phosphate isomerase, alpha-enolase, and phosphoglycerate mutase1, with significantly higher immunoreactivity in the tumor samples than in the normal samples were identified as biomarker candidates. Immunohistochemistry and Western blotting revealed higher expression of these biomarkers in the malignant tumors than in the normal or benign tumors. The autoantigens found in this study have been reported to elicit autoantibody response in the human breast cancer, indicating the similarity of breast cancer proteome profile in dogs with that in human beings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24338489/