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Download fileDetection of Ovarian Cancer Using Samples Sourced from the Vaginal Microenvironment
journal contribution
posted on 2019-12-02, 17:34 authored by Melissa
M. Galey, Alexandria N. Young, Valentina Z. Petukhova, Mingxun Wang, Jian Wang, Amrita Salvi, Angela Russo, Joanna E. Burdette, Laura M. SanchezMass spectrometry (MS) offers high levels of specificity
and sensitivity
in clinical applications, and we have previously been able to demonstrate
that matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF)
MS is capable of distinguishing two-component cell mixtures at low
limits of detection. Ovarian cancer is notoriously difficult to detect
due to the lack of diagnostic techniques available to the medical
community. By sampling a local microenvironment, such as the vaginal
canal and cervix, a MS based method is presented for monitoring disease
progression from proximal samples to the diseased tissue. A murine
xenograft model of high grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) was
used for this study, and vaginal lavages were obtained from mice on
a weekly basis throughout disease progression and subjected to our
MALDI-TOF MS workflow followed by statistical analyses. Proteins in
the 4–20 kDa region of the mass spectrum yielded a fingerprint
that we could consistently measure over time that correlated with
disease progression. These fingerprints were found to be largely stable
across all mice, with the protein fingerprint converging toward the
end point of the study. MALDI-TOF MS serves as a unique analytical
technique for measuring a sampled vaginal microenvironment in a specific
and sensitive manner for the detection of HGSOC in a murine model.