TLE3 AS A MARKER FOR CHEMOTHERAPY

Abstract
Methods of using TLE3 as a marker for predicting the likelihood that a patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy. Methods of using TLE3 as a marker for selecting a chemotherapy for a cancer.
Description
SEQUENCE LISTING

In accordance with 37 C.F.R. §1.52(e)(5), a Sequence Listing in the form of a text file (entitled “Sequence Listing.txt,” created on Nov. 5, 2012, and 90 kilobytes) is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A major challenge of cancer treatment is the selection of chemotherapies that maximize efficacy and minimize toxicity for a given patient. Assays for cell surface markers, e.g., using immunohistochemistry (IHC), have provided means for dividing certain cancers into subclasses. For example, one factor considered in prognosis and treatment decisions for breast cancer is the presence or absence of the estrogen receptor (ER). ER-positive breast cancers typically respond much more readily to hormonal therapies such as tamoxifen, which acts as an anti-estrogen in breast tissue, than ER-negative cancers. Though useful, these analyses only in part predict the clinical behavior of breast cancers. There is phenotypic diversity present in cancers that current diagnostic tools fail to detect. As a consequence, there is still much controversy over how to stratify patients amongst potential treatments in order to optimize outcome (e.g., for breast cancer see “NIH Consensus Development Conference Statement: Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer, Nov. 1-3, 2000”, J. Nat. Cancer Inst. Monographs, 30:5-15, 2001 and Di Leo et al., Int. J. Clin. Oncol. 7:245-253, 2002). In particular, there is currently no tool for predicting a patient's likely response to treatment with paclitaxel, a chemotherapeutic with particularly adverse side-effects. There clearly exists a need for improved methods and reagents for classifying cancers and thereby selecting therapeutic regimens that maximize efficacy and minimize toxicity for a given patient.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

We have identified a correlation between the expression of TLE3 (transducin-like enhancer of split 3, Entrez Gene ID 7090) and a cancer's response to chemotherapy. This correlation has been demonstrated using TLE3 antibodies and samples from breast cancer cohorts which include both treated and untreated patients with known outcome. The inventors have also observed that binding of TLE3 antibodies in samples from treated ovarian cancer patients correlates with improved prognosis. In one aspect, the present invention therefore provides methods of using TLE3 as a marker for predicting the likelihood that a patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy. In another aspect, the present invention provides methods of using TLE3 as a marker for deciding whether to administer chemotherapy to a cancer patient. In yet another aspect, the present invention provides methods of using TLE3 as a marker for selecting a chemotherapy for a cancer patient.


Expression of TLE3 can be detected using any known method. Thus, while the inventive methods have been exemplified by detecting TLE3 polypeptides using antibodies, in certain embodiments TLE3 polynucleotides may be detected using one or more primers as is well known in the art.


In general, TLE3 can be used in conjunction with other markers or clinical factors (e.g., stage, tumor size, node characteristics, age, etc.) to further improve the predictive power of the inventive methods.


Brief Description of the Appendix

This patent application refers to material comprising a table and data presented as Appendix A immediately after the section entitled “Exemplification” and immediately before the section entitled “Other Embodiments.” Specifically, Appendix A is a table that lists a variety of markers that could be used in a panel in conjunction with the TLE3 marker in an inventive method. The table includes the antibody ID, parent gene name, Entrez Gene ID, known aliases for the parent gene, peptides that may be used in preparing antibodies and exemplary antibody titers for staining. Using the parent gene name, Entrez Gene ID and/or known aliases for the parent gene, a skilled person can readily obtain the nucleotide (and corresponding amino acid) sequences for each and every one of the parent genes that are listed in Appendix A from a public database (e.g., GenBank, Swiss-Prot or any future derivative of these). The nucleotide and corresponding amino acid sequences for each and every one of the parent genes that are listed in Appendix A are hereby incorporated by reference from these public databases. Antibodies with IDs that begin with S5 or S6 may be obtained from commercial sources as indicated.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING


FIG. 1 compares IHC images of TLE3-negative (S0643−) and TLE3-positive (S0643+) samples from breast cancer patients.



FIG. 2 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using all patients in the Huntsville Hospital (HH) breast cancer cohort after classification based on staining with an antibody raised against the TLE3 marker. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this breast cancer cohort (HR=0.573, p<0.004).



FIG. 3 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using all patients in the Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RP) breast cancer cohort after classification based on staining with an antibody raised against the TLE3 marker. The selected patients in the RP cohort were all triple negative for the ER (estrogen receptor, Entrez GeneID 2099), PR (progesterone receptor, Entrez GeneID 5241) and HER-2 markers (v-erb-b2 erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 2, Entrez GeneID 2064). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this breast cancer cohort (HR=0.24, p<0.011).



FIG. 4 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 1 that did not receive chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker loses its correlation with prognosis in breast cancer patients that did not receive chemotherapy (HR=0.788, p=0.49).



FIG. 5 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 1 that did receive chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, the correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis was restored in patients that did receive chemotherapy (HR=0.539, p<0.013).



FIG. 6 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 2 that did receive chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of breast cancer patients (HR=0.194, p=0.010). These results parallel those obtained in FIG. 5 with the HH cohort.



FIG. 7 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 5 that received CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil) chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients (HR=0.398, p<0.019).



FIG. 8 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 5 that received CA (cyclophosphamide and adriamycin) or CAF (cyclophosphamide, adriamycin and 5-fluorouracil) chemotherapy (with or without a taxane). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, the correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis loses significance in this subset of treated patients (HR=0.666, p=0.22).



FIG. 9 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 8 that received CA or CAF chemotherapy only (i.e., without a taxane). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, there is no correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis in this subset of treated patients (HR=1.03, p=0.95).



FIG. 10 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 8 that received CA or CAF in combination with a taxane. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, the correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis was restored in this subset of treated patients (HR=0.114, p=0.038).



FIG. 11 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received CA chemotherapy only (i.e., without a taxane). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, there is no correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis in this subset of treated patients (HR=0.759, p=0.81).



FIG. 12 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received CA in combination with a taxane. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients (HR=0.142, p=0.011).



FIG. 13 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received a taxane or CMF. Some of the patients receiving a taxane also received CA. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients (HR=0.137, p=0.011).



FIG. 14 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. The sample size was small (N=12); however, as shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker showed significant correlation with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients when measured using the Fisher Exact Test (p=0.005).



FIGS. 15-17 show Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients with stage II+(FIG. 15), stage IIb+ (FIG. 16) and stage III+ (FIG. 17) cancers were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. In each case, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlated with improved prognosis across these subsets of treated patients. The sample size was small in the subset of FIG. 17 (N=19); however significance was obtained when measured using the Fisher Exact Test (p=0.020).



FIG. 18 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) ovarian cancer cohort. All patients received paclitaxel. Most patients also received platinum chemotherapy (carboplatin or cisplatin). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlated with prognosis in these treated patients (HR=0.64, p<0.049).





DEFINITIONS

Binds—When an interaction partner “binds” a marker they are linked by direct non-covalent interactions.


Cancer markers—“Cancer markers” or “markers” are molecular entities that are detectable in cancer samples. Generally, markers may be polypeptides (e.g., TLE3 protein) or polynucleotides (e.g., TLE3 mRNA) that are indicative of the expression of a gene (e.g., TLE3 gene) and present within the cancer sample, e.g., within the cytoplasm or membranes of cancerous cells and/or secreted from such cells.


Cancer sample—As used herein, the term “cancer sample” or “sample” is taken broadly to include cell or tissue samples removed from a cancer patient (e.g., from a tumor, from the bloodstream, etc.), cells derived from a tumor that may be located elsewhere in the body (e.g., cells in the bloodstream or at a site of metastasis), or any material derived from such a sample. Derived material may include, for example, nucleic acids or proteins extracted from the sample, cell progeny, etc. In one embodiment, a cancer sample may be a tumor sample.


Correlation—“Correlation” refers to the degree to which one variable can be predicted from another variable, e.g., the degree to which a cancer's response to therapy can be predicted from the expression of a marker in a cancer sample. A variety of statistical methods may be used to measure correlation between two variables, e.g., without limitation the student t-test, the Fisher exact test, the Pearson correlation coefficient, the Spearman correlation coefficient, the Chi squared test, etc. Results are traditionally given as a measured correlation coefficient with a p-value that provides a measure of the likelihood that the correlation arose by chance. A correlation with a p-value that is less than 0.05 is generally considered to be statistically significant. Preferred correlations have p-values that are less than 0.01, especially less than 0.001.


Hybridized—When a primer and a marker are physically “hybridized” with one another as described herein, they are non-covalently linked by base pair interactions.


Interaction partner—An “interaction partner” is an entity that binds a polypeptide marker. For example and without limitation, an interaction partner may be an antibody or a fragment thereof that binds a marker. In general, an interaction partner is said to “bind specifically” with a marker if it binds at a detectable level with the marker and does not bind detectably with unrelated molecular entities (e.g., other markers) under similar conditions. Specific association between a marker and an interaction partner will typically be dependent upon the presence of a particular structural feature of the target marker such as an antigenic determinant or epitope recognized by the interaction partner. In general, it is to be understood that specificity need not be absolute. For example, it is well known in the art that antibodies frequently cross-react with other epitopes in addition to the target epitope. Such cross-reactivity may be acceptable depending upon the application for which the interaction partner is to be used. Thus the degree of specificity of an interaction partner will depend on the context in which it is being used. In general, an interaction partner exhibits specificity for a particular marker if it favors binding with that partner above binding with other potential partners, e.g., other markers. One of ordinary skill in the art will be able to select interaction partners having a sufficient degree of specificity to perform appropriately in any given application (e.g., for detection of a target marker, for therapeutic purposes, etc.). It is also to be understood that specificity may be evaluated in the context of additional factors such as the affinity of the interaction partner for the target marker versus the affinity of the interaction partner for other potential partners, e.g., other markers. If an interaction partner exhibits a high affinity for a target marker and low affinity for non-target molecules, the interaction partner will likely be an acceptable reagent for diagnostic purposes even if it lacks specificity.


Primer—A “primer” is an oligonucleotide entity that physically hybridizes with a polynucleotide marker. In general, a primer is said to “hybridize specifically” with a marker if it hybridizes at a detectable level with the marker and does not hybridize detectably with unrelated molecular entities (e.g., other markers) under similar conditions. Specific hybridization between a marker and a primer will typically be dependent upon the presence of a particular nucleotide sequence of the target marker which is complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the primer. In general, it is to be understood that specificity need not be absolute. The degree of specificity of a primer will depend on the context in which it is being used. In general, a primer exhibits specificity for a particular marker if it favors hybridization with that partner above hybridization with other potential partners, e.g., other markers. One of ordinary skill in the art will be able to select primers having a sufficient degree of specificity to perform appropriately in any given application. It is also to be understood that specificity may be evaluated in the context of additional factors such as the affinity of the primer for the target marker versus the affinity of the primer for other potential partners, e.g., other markers. If a primer exhibits a high affinity for a target marker and low affinity for non-target molecules, the primer will likely be an acceptable reagent for diagnostic purposes even if it lacks specificity.


Response—The “response” of a cancer to therapy may represent any detectable change, for example at the molecular, cellular, organellar, or organismal level. For instance, tumor size, patient life expectancy, recurrence, or the length of time the patient survives, etc., are all responses. Responses can be measured in any of a variety of ways, including for example non-invasive measuring of tumor size (e.g., CT scan, image-enhanced visualization, etc.), invasive measuring of tumor size (e.g., residual tumor resection, etc.), surrogate marker measurement (e.g., serum PSA, etc.), clinical course variance (e.g., measurement of patient quality of life, time to relapse, survival time, etc.).


Small molecule—A “small molecule” is a non-polymeric molecule. A small molecule can be synthesized in a laboratory (e.g., by combinatorial synthesis) or found in nature (e.g., a natural product). A small molecule is typically characterized in that it contains several carbon-carbon bonds and has a molecular weight of less than about 1500 Da, although this characterization is not intended to be limiting for the purposes of the present invention.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION

As noted above, we have identified a correlation between the expression of TLE3 (transducin-like enhancer of split 3, Entrez Gene ID 7090) in a cancer sample and a cancer's response to chemotherapy. As described in the Examples, this correlation has been demonstrated using TLE3 antibodies and samples from two breast cancer cohorts which include both treated and untreated patients with known outcome. We have also shown that this predictive model is consistent when applied to samples from a cohort of treated ovarian cancer patients. We have also demonstrated the utility of TLE3 for predicting response to specific types of chemotherapies including treatments which involve the administration of cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics, e.g., methotrexate and taxanes. Since these chemotherapeutics have known utility across different cancer types, these results suggest that the inventive methods will also be useful in predicting their efficacy across different cancer types.


Predicting Response to Chemotherapy and Selecting Chemotherapy

In one aspect, the present invention provides methods of using TLE3 as a marker for predicting the likelihood that a patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy. In general, these methods involve providing a cancer sample from a cancer patient, determining whether TLE3 is expressed in the cancer sample, and predicting the likelihood that the patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy based upon a result of the step of determining. In one embodiment, the step of predicting comprises predicting that the patient's cancer is likely to respond to chemotherapy based upon the presence of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample. In one embodiment, the step of predicting comprises predicting that the patient's cancer is unlikely to respond to chemotherapy based upon the absence of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample.


In certain embodiments, a negative control sample is provided and the step of determining comprises detecting a level of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample and the negative control sample and comparing the level of expression of TLE3 in the cancer sample and the negative control sample. In general, the negative control sample can be any sample that does not reproducibly express TLE3. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be a sample that does not reproducibly bind TLE3 antibodies. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be a sample that does not reproducibly produce a detectable level of TLE3 mRNA. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be from a patient with a TLE3-negative cancer. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be from a patient without cancer. In certain embodiments the negative control sample may originate from the same tissue type as the cancer in question (e.g., breast tissue when considering breast cancer). In other embodiments, the negative control sample may originate from a different tissue type or even a different organism, or a cell line.


Additionally or alternatively, in certain embodiments, a positive control sample is provided and the step of determining comprises detecting a level of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample and the positive control sample and comparing the level of expression of TLE3 in the cancer sample and the positive control sample. In general, the positive control sample can be any sample that reproducibly expresses TLE3. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be a sample that reproducibly bind TLE3 antibodies. In one embodiment, the negative control sample can be a sample that reproducibly produces a detectable level of TLE3 mRNA. In one embodiment, the positive control sample can be from a patient with a TLE3-positive cancer. In certain embodiments the positive control sample may originate from the same tissue type as the cancer in question (e.g., breast tissue when considering breast cancer). In other embodiments, the positive control sample may originate from a different tissue type or even a different organism, or cell line.


Expression of TLE3 can be Determined Using any Known Method.


In one embodiment, TLE3 polypeptides may be detected using an interaction partner that binds a TLE3 polypeptide (e.g., TLE3 protein or an antigenic fragment thereof). For example, as described below one may use a TLE3 antibody as an interaction partner and detect TLE3 expression by contacting the cancer sample with the TLE3 antibody. In such embodiments, the inventive methods may involve providing a cancer sample from a cancer patient, contacting the cancer sample with an antibody directed to TLE3, and predicting the likelihood that the patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy based upon binding of the antibody to the cancer sample. In one embodiment, the step of predicting may comprise predicting that the patient's cancer is likely to respond to chemotherapy based upon binding of the antibody to the cancer sample. In another embodiment, the step of predicting may comprise predicting that the patient's cancer is unlikely to respond to chemotherapy based upon lack of binding of the antibody to the cancer sample.


In another embodiment, TLE3 polynucleotides may be detected using one or more primers that hybridize with a TLE3 polynucleotide (e.g., a TLE3 mRNA, cDNA or RNA). In such embodiments, the inventive methods may involve providing a cancer sample from a cancer patient, contacting the cancer sample with one or more primers that hybridize with TLE3, and predicting the likelihood that the patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy based upon hybridization of the one or more primers to the cancer sample. In one embodiment, the step of predicting may comprise predicting that the patient's cancer is likely to respond to chemotherapy based upon hybridization of the one or more primers to the cancer sample. In another embodiment, the step of predicting may comprise predicting that the patient's cancer is unlikely to respond to chemotherapy based upon lack of hybridization of the one or more primers to the cancer sample.


In another aspect, the present invention provides methods for deciding whether to administer chemotherapy to the cancer patient based upon the likelihood that the patient's cancer will respond to chemotherapy. In one embodiment, the step of deciding comprises deciding to administer chemotherapy to the cancer patient based upon the presence of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample. In one embodiment, the step of deciding comprises deciding not to administer chemotherapy to the cancer patient based upon the absence of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample.


In yet another aspect, the present invention provides methods for selecting a chemotherapy for a cancer patient. In general, these methods comprise providing a cancer sample from a cancer patient, determining whether TLE3 is expressed in the cancer sample, and selecting a chemotherapy for the cancer patient based upon the results of the step of determining. In one embodiment, the step of selecting comprises selecting a chemotherapy based upon the presence of TLE3 expression in the cancer sample.


As described in the Examples, we have demonstrated that TLE3 expression correlates with response to chemotherapy with methotrexate (see FIG. 7) and taxanes (see FIGS. 10, 12 and 13). Methotrexate and taxanes are thought to be cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics (e.g., see Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, IX. Chemotherapy of Neoplastic Diseases Chapter 51. Antineoplastic Agents, 11th Edition, Laurence L. Brunton, editor-in-chief, John S. Lazo and Keith L. Parker, Associate Editors). Cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics exhibit their mechanism of action within a specific phase of the cell cycle in contrast to non-cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics that work equally with all phases including the resting phase (G0). Other plant alkaloids besides the taxanes have also been classified in the literature as cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics as have other antimetabolites besides methotrexate. In contrast, many alkylating agents such as cisplatin and cyclophosamide have been classified as non-cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics. Our results suggest that the predictive power of TLE3 may extend to other cell cycle specific chemotherapeutics besides methotrexate and taxanes.


In some embodiments, the inventive methods may therefore be used to select, or decide whether to administer, a cell cycle specific chemotherapeutic. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used to select, or decide whether to administer, an antimetabolite. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used to select, or decide whether to administer, a plant alkaloid. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used to select, or decide whether to administer, methotrexate. In another embodiment, the inventive methods may be used to select, or decide whether to administer, a taxane. In one embodiment the taxane is paclitaxel. In one embodiment the taxane is docetaxel.


In each case it will be appreciated that these chemotherapeutics may be administered alone or in combination with other chemotherapeutics as is known in the art and discussed below. It will also be appreciated that the present invention encompasses methods in which the selected chemotherapeutic is a methotrexate or taxane derivative, i.e., a compound with a structure which is derived from methotrexate or a taxane. Derivatives will typically share most of the structure of the parent compound but may include different substituents, heteroatoms, ring fusions, levels of saturation, isomerism, stereoisomerism, etc. at one or more positions within the parent compound. Without limitation, the following U.S. patents describe the preparation of exemplary methotrexate derivatives that could be employed according to an inventive method: U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,559,149 and 4,374,987. Without limitation, the following U.S. patents describe the preparation of exemplary taxane derivatives that could be employed according to an inventive method: U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,074,945; 7,063,977; 6,906,101; 6,649,778; 6,596,880; 6,552,205; 6,531,611; 6,482,963; 6,482,850; 6,462,208; 6,455,575; 6,441,026; 6,433,180; 6,392,063; 6,369,244; 6,339,164; 6,291,690; 6,268,381; 6,239,167; 6,218,553; 6,214,863; 6,201,140; 6,191,290; 6,187,916; 6,162,920; 6,147,234; 6,136,808; 6,114,550; 6,107,332; 6,051,600; 6,025,385; 6,011,056; 5,955,489; 5,939,567; 5,912,263; 5,908,835; 5,869,680; 5,861,515; 5,821,263; 5,763,477; 5,750,561; 5,728,687; 5,726,346; 5,726,318; 5,721,268; 5,719,177; 5,714,513; 5,714,512; 5,703,117; 5,698,582; 5,686,623; 5,677,462; 5,646,176; 5,637,723; 5,621,121; 5,616,739; 5,606,083; 5,580,899; 5,476,954; 5,403,858; 5,380,916; 5,254,703; and 5,250,722. The entire contents of each of the aforementioned patents and any other reference which is cited herein is hereby incorporated by reference.


Methotrexate acts by inhibiting the metabolism of folic acid and has has been approved for the treatment of bladder cancer, breast cancer, gastric cancer, choriocarcinoma, head and neck cancer, leptomeningeal cancer, leukemia (acute meningeal, acute lymphoblastic, acute lymphocytic), lymphoma (Burkitt's, childhood, non-Hodgkin's), mycosis fungoides, primary unknown cancer and lymphatic sarcoma (Methotrexate in BC Cancer Agency Cancer Drug Manual, 2007). Methotrexate has also been shown to be useful for treating esophageal cancer, lung cancer and testicular cancer (Methotrexate in UpToDate, 2007). In certain embodiments, the inventive methods comprise a step of selecting, or deciding whether to administer, methotrexate in combination with one or more additional chemotherapeutics. For example, methotrexate is commonly administered to cancer patients as a combination called CMF which also includes cyclophosphamide and 5-fluorouracil.


Taxanes are diterpenes produced by the plants of the genus Taxus. Taxanes can be obtained from natural sources or produced synthetically. Taxanes include paclitaxel (TAXOL™) and docetaxel (TAXOTERE™). Taxanes work by interfering with normal microtubule growth during cell division. In certain embodiments, the inventive methods comprise a step of selecting, or deciding whether to administer, a taxane (e.g., paclitaxel or docetaxel) in combination with one or more additional chemotherapeutics. For example, taxanes are commonly administered to cancer patients in combination with cyclophosphamide and adriamycin (doxorubicin) and optionally 5-fluorouracil (i.e., with CA or CAF).


Paclitaxel has been approved for the treatment of breast cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma, lung cancer and ovarian cancer (Paclitaxel in BC Cancer Agency Cancer Drug Manual, 2007 and Mekhail and Markman, Expert Opin. Pharmacother. 3:755-66, 2002). Paclitaxel has also been shown to be useful in treating cervical cancer (pp. 1124-34 in AHFS 2005 Drug Information. Bethesda, Md.: American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, 2005), endometrial cancer (Paclitaxel in BC Cancer Agency Cancer Drug Manual, 2007), bladder cancer (Paclitaxel in UpToDate, 2007), head and neck cancer (Paclitaxel in UpToDate, 2007), leukemia (Paclitaxel in UpToDate, 2007) and malignant melanoma (Paclitaxel in UpToDate, 2007). Side effects of paclitaxel include hypersensitivity reactions such as flushing of the face, skin rash, or shortness of breath. Patients often receive medication to prevent hypersensitivity reactions before they take paclitaxel. Paclitaxel can also cause temporary damage to the bone marrow. Bone marrow damage can cause a person to be more susceptible to infection, anemia, and bruise or bleed easily. Other side effects may include joint or muscle pain in the arms or legs; diarrhea; nausea and vomiting; numbness, burning, or tingling in the hands or feet; and loss of hair.


Docetaxel has been approved for the treatment of breast cancer (Aapro, Seminars in Oncology 25 (5 Suppl 12):7-11, 1998; Nabholtz et al., Journal of Clinical Oncology 17(5):1413-24, 1999; Sjostrom et al., European Journal of Cancer 35(8):1194-201, 1999; and Burstein et al., Journal of Clinical Oncology 18(6):1212-9, 2000), non-small cell lung cancer (Fossella et al., Journal of Clinical Oncology 18(12):2354-62, 2000 and Hainsworth et al., Cancer 89(2):328-33, 2000) and ovarian cancer (Kaye et al., European Journal of Cancer 33(13):2167-70, 1997). Docetaxel has also been shown to be useful in treating esothelioma (Vorobiof et al., Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol 19:578a, 2000), prostate cancer (Picus et al., Seminars in Oncology 26 (5 Suppl 17):14-8, 1999 and Petrylak et al., Journal of Clinical Oncology 17(3):958-67, 1999), urothelial transitional cell cancer (Dimopoulos et al., Annals of Oncology 10(11):1385-8, 1999 and Pectasides et al., European Journal of Cancer 36(1):74-9, 2000), head and neck cancer (Docetaxel in USP DI, 2000 and Couteau et al., British Journal of Cancer 81(3):457-62, 1999) and small cell lung cancer (Smyth et al., European Journal of Cancer 30A(8):1058-60, 1994).


Our observation that improved response to chemotherapy is observed for both breast and ovarian cancer patients that are TLE3-positive suggests that the inventive methods may be useful across different cancer types. Our observation that TLE3 expression is associated with improved response to treatment with methotrexate and taxanes further suggest that the inventive methods may be applicable across cancers that respond to these chemotherapeutics. As discussed above, this includes without limitation breast cancer, ovarian cancer, lung cancer, bladder cancer, gastric cancer, head and neck cancer, and leukemia.


In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has breast cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has ovarian cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has lung cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has bladder cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has gastric cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has head and neck cancer. In one embodiment, the inventive methods may be used with a cancer patient that has leukemia.


As demonstrated in the Examples, in one embodiment, the correlation between TLE3 expression and response to chemotherapy was observed with breast cancer patients that are triple negative for the ER (estrogen receptor, Entrez GeneID 2099), PR (progesterone receptor, Entrez GeneID 5241) and HER-2 markers (v-erb-b2 erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 2, Entrez GeneID 2064). In certain embodiments, the inventive methods may therefore be used with breast cancer patients that belong to this class.


As demonstrated in the Examples, the correlation between TLE3 expression and response to chemotherapy was found to also exist when treatment was administered in a neoadjuvant setting. Thus, in certain embodiments, the inventive methods may be used with patients receiving chemotherapy in a neoadjuvant setting. In other embodiments, the chemotherapy may be administered in an adjuvant setting.


As demonstrated in the Examples, the correlation between TLE3 expression and response to chemotherapy was also found to be independent of stage. Thus, in certain embodiments, the inventive methods may be used with patients with a stage 11+(i.e., stage 11 or greater) cancer. In certain embodiments, the inventive methods may be used with patients with a stage IIb+ or a stage III+ cancer.


Detecting TLE3 Expression

As mentioned above, expression of TLE3 can be determined using any known method. In one embodiment, TLE3 expression may be determined by detecting TLE3 polypeptide markers using interaction partners (e.g., antibodies). In another embodiment, TLE3 expression may be determined by detecting TLE3 polynucleotide markers using primers.


Detecting TLE3 Polypeptide Markers

TLE3 polypeptide markers may be detected using any interaction partner that binds a TLE3 polypeptide marker (which could be a TLE3 protein or an antigenic fragment thereof). Thus, any entity that binds detectably to the TLE3 marker may be utilized as an interaction partner in accordance with the present invention, so long as it binds the marker with an appropriate combination of affinity and specificity.


Particularly preferred interaction partners are antibodies, or fragments (e.g., F(ab) fragments, F(ab′)2 fragments, Fv fragments, or sFv fragments, etc.; see, for example, Inbar et al., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 69:2659, 1972; Hochman et al., Biochem. 15:2706, 1976; and Ehrlich et al., Biochem. 19:4091, 1980; Huston et al., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 85:5879, 1998; U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,091,513 and 5,132,405 to Huston et al.; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,946,778 to Ladner et al., each of which is incorporated herein by reference). In certain embodiments, interaction partners may be selected from libraries of mutant antibodies (or fragments thereof). For example, collections of antibodies that each include different point mutations may be screened for their association with a marker of interest. Yet further, chimeric antibodies may be used as interaction partners, e.g., “humanized” or “veneered” antibodies as described in greater detail below.


When antibodies are used as interaction partners, these may be prepared by any of a variety of techniques known to those of ordinary skill in the art (e.g., see Harlow and Lane, Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1988, see also the Examples). For example, antibodies can be produced by cell culture techniques, including the generation of monoclonal antibodies, or via transfection of antibody genes into suitable bacterial or mammalian cell hosts, in order to allow for the production of recombinant antibodies. In one technique, an “immunogen” comprising an antigenic portion of a marker of interest (or the marker itself) is initially injected into any of a wide variety of mammals (e.g., mice, rats, rabbits, sheep or goats). In this step, a marker (or an antigenic portion thereof) may serve as the immunogen without modification. Alternatively, particularly for relatively short markers, a superior immune response may be elicited if the marker is joined to a carrier protein, such as bovine serum albumin or keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). The immunogen is injected into the animal host, preferably according to a predetermined schedule incorporating one or more booster immunizations and the animals are bled periodically. Polyclonal antibodies specific for the marker may then be purified from such antisera by, for example, affinity chromatography using the marker (or an antigenic portion thereof) coupled to a suitable solid support. An exemplary method is described in the Examples.


If desired for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes, monoclonal antibodies specific for TLE3 may be prepared, for example, using the technique of Kohler and Milstein, Eur. J. Immunol. 6:511, 1976 and improvements thereto. Briefly, these methods involve the preparation of immortal cell lines capable of producing antibodies having the desired specificity (i.e., reactivity with the marker of interest). Such cell lines may be produced, for example, from spleen cells obtained from an animal immunized as described above. The spleen cells are then immortalized by, for example, fusion with a myeloma cell fusion partner, preferably one that is syngeneic with the immunized animal. A variety of fusion techniques may be employed. For example, the spleen cells and myeloma cells may be combined with a nonionic detergent for a few minutes and then plated at low density on a selective medium that supports the growth of hybrid cells, but not myeloma cells. A preferred selection technique uses HAT (hypoxanthine, aminopterin, thymidine) selection. After a sufficient time, usually about 1 to 2 weeks, colonies of hybrids are observed. Single colonies are selected and their culture supernatants tested for binding activity against the marker. Hybridomas having high reactivity and specificity are preferred.


Monoclonal antibodies may be isolated from the supernatants of growing hybridoma colonies. In addition, various techniques may be employed to enhance the yield, such as injection of the hybridoma cell line into the peritoneal cavity of a suitable vertebrate host, such as a mouse. Monoclonal antibodies may then be harvested from the ascites fluid or the blood. Contaminants may be removed from the antibodies by conventional techniques, such as chromatography, gel filtration, precipitation and extraction. TLE3 may be used in the purification process in, for example, an affinity chromatography step.


It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to using antibodies or antibody fragments as interaction partners. In particular, the present invention also encompasses the use of synthetic interaction partners that mimic the functions of antibodies. Several approaches to designing and/or identifying antibody mimics have been proposed and demonstrated (e.g., see the reviews by Hsieh-Wilson et al., Acc. Chem. Res. 29:164, 2000 and Peczuh and Hamilton, Chem. Rev. 100:2479, 2000). For example, small molecules that bind protein surfaces in a fashion similar to that of natural proteins have been identified by screening synthetic libraries of small molecules or natural product isolates (e.g., see Gallop et al., J. Med. Chem. 37:1233, 1994; Gordon et al., J. Med. Chem. 37:1385, 1994; DeWitt et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90:6909, 1993; Bunin et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91:4708, 1994; Virgilio and Ellman, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 116:11580, 1994; Wang et al., J. Med. Chem. 38:2995, 1995; and Kick and Ellman, J. Med. Chem. 38:1427, 1995). Similarly, combinatorial approaches have been successfully applied to screen libraries of peptides and proteins for their ability to bind a range of proteins (e.g., see Cull et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89:1865, 1992; Mattheakis et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91:9022, 1994; Scott and Smith, Science 249:386, 1990; Devlin et al., Science 249:404, 1990; Corey et al., Gene 128:129, 1993; Bray et al., Tetrahedron Lett. 31:5811, 1990; Fodor et al., Science 251:767, 1991; Houghten et al., Nature 354:84, 1991; Lam et al., Nature 354:82, 1991; Blake and Litzi-Davis, Bioconjugate Chem. 3:510, 1992; Needels et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90:10700, 1993; and Ohlmeyer et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90:10922, 1993). Similar approaches have also been used to study carbohydrate-protein interactions (e.g., see Oldenburg et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89:5393, 1992) and polynucleotide-protein interactions (e.g., see Ellington and Szostak, Nature 346:818, 1990 and Tuerk and Gold, Science 249:505, 1990). These approaches have also been extended to study interactions between proteins and unnatural biopolymers such as oligocarbamates, oligoureas, oligosulfones, etc. (e.g., see Zuckermann et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 114:10646, 1992; Simon et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89:9367, 1992; Zuckermann et al., J. Med. Chem. 37:2678, 1994; Burgess et al., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 34:907, 1995; and Cho et al., Science 261:1303, 1993). Yet further, alternative protein scaffolds that are loosely based around the basic fold of antibody molecules have been suggested and may be used in the preparation of inventive interaction partners (e.g., see Ku and Schultz Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 92:6552, 1995). Antibody mimics comprising a scaffold of a small molecule such as 3-aminomethylbenzoic acid and a substituent consisting of a single peptide loop have also been constructed. The peptide loop performs the binding function in these mimics (e.g., see Smythe et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 116:2725, 1994). A synthetic antibody mimic comprising multiple peptide loops built around a calixarene unit has also been described (e.g., see U.S. Pat. No. 5,770,380 to Hamilton et al.).


Any available strategy or system may be utilized to detect association between an interaction partner and the TLE3 marker. In certain embodiments, association can be detected by adding a detectable label to the interaction partner. In other embodiments, association can be detected by using a labeled secondary interaction partner that binds specifically with the primary interaction partner, e.g., as is well known in the art of antigen/antibody detection. The detectable label may be directly detectable or indirectly detectable, e.g., through combined action with one or more additional members of a signal producing system. Examples of directly detectable labels include radioactive, paramagnetic, fluorescent, light scattering, absorptive and colorimetric labels. Examples of indirectly detectable include chemiluminescent labels, e.g., enzymes that are capable of converting a substrate to a chromogenic product such as alkaline phosphatase, horseradish peroxidase and the like.


Once a labeled interaction partner has bound the TLE3 marker, the complex may be visualized or detected in a variety of ways, with the particular manner of detection being chosen based on the particular detectable label, where representative detection means include, e.g., scintillation counting, autoradiography, measurement of paramagnetism, fluorescence measurement, light absorption measurement, measurement of light scattering and the like.


In general, association between an interaction partner and the TLE3 marker may be assayed by contacting the interaction partner with a cancer sample that includes the marker. Depending upon the nature of the sample, appropriate methods include, but are not limited to, immunohistochemistry (IHC), radioimmunoassay, ELISA, immunoblotting and fluorescence activates cell sorting (FACS). In the case where the protein is to be detected in a tissue sample, e.g., a biopsy sample, IHC is a particularly appropriate detection method. Techniques for obtaining tissue and cell samples and performing IHC and FACS are well known in the art.


Where large numbers of samples are to be handled (e.g., when simultaneously analyzing several samples from the same patient or samples from different patients), it may be desirable to utilize arrayed and/or automated formats. In certain embodiments, tissue arrays as described in the Examples may be used. Tissue arrays may be constructed according to a variety of techniques. According to one procedure, a commercially-available mechanical device (e.g., the manual tissue arrayer MTA1 from Beecher Instruments of Sun Prairie, Wis.) is used to remove an 0.6-micron-diameter, full thickness “core” from a paraffin block (the donor block) prepared from each patient, and to insert the core into a separate paraffin block (the recipient block) in a designated location on a grid. In preferred embodiments, cores from as many as about 400 patients (or multiple cores from the same patient) can be inserted into a single recipient block; preferably, core-to-core spacing is approximately 1 mm. The resulting tissue array may be processed into thin sections for staining with interaction partners according to standard methods applicable to paraffin embedded material.


Whatever the format, and whatever the detection strategy, identification of a discriminating titer can simplify binding studies to assess the desirability of using an interaction partner. In such studies, the interaction partner is contacted with a plurality of different samples that preferably have at least one common trait (e.g., tissue of origin), and often have multiple common traits (e.g., tissue of origin, stage, microscopic characteristics, etc.). In some cases, it will be desirable to select a group of samples with at least one common trait and at least one different trait, so that a titer is determined that distinguishes the different trait. In other cases, it will be desirable to select a group of samples with no detectable different traits, so that a titer is determined that distinguishes among previously indistinguishable samples. Those of ordinary skill in the art will understand, however, that the present invention often will allow both of these goals to be accomplished even in studies of sample collections with varying degrees of similarity and difference.


As discussed above and in the Examples, the inventors have applied these techniques to samples from breast and ovarian cancer patients. The invention also encompasses the recognition that markers that are secreted from the cells in which they are produced may be present in serum, enabling their detection through a blood test rather than requiring a biopsy specimen. An interaction partner that binds to such markers represents a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention.


In general, the results of such an assay can be presented in any of a variety of formats. The results can be presented in a qualitative fashion. For example, the test report may indicate only whether or not the TLE3 marker was detected, perhaps also with an indication of the limits of detection. Additionally the test report may indicate the subcellular location of binding, e.g., nuclear versus cytoplasmic and/or the relative levels of binding in these different subcellular locations. The results may be presented in a semi-quantitative fashion. For example, various ranges may be defined and the ranges may be assigned a score (e.g., 0 to 5) that provides a certain degree of quantitative information. Such a score may reflect various factors, e.g., the number of cells in which the marker is detected, the intensity of the signal (which may indicate the level of expression of the marker), etc. The results may be presented in a quantitative fashion, e.g., as a percentage of cells in which the marker is detected, as a concentration, etc. As will be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art, the type of output provided by a test will vary depending upon the technical limitations of the test and the biological significance associated with detection of the marker. For example, in certain circumstances a purely qualitative output (e.g., whether or not the marker is detected at a certain detection level) provides significant information. In other cases a more quantitative output (e.g., a ratio of the level of expression of the marker in two samples) is necessary.


Detecting TLE3 Polynucleotide Markers

Although in many cases detection of polypeptide markers using interaction partners such as antibodies may represent the most convenient means of determining whether TLE3 is expressed in a particular sample, the inventive methods also encompass the use of primers for the detection of polynucleotide markers. A variety of methods for detecting the presence of a particular polynucleotide marker are known in the art and may be used in the inventive methods. In general, these methods rely on hybridization between one or more primers and the polynucleotide marker.


Any available strategy or system may be utilized to detect hybridization between primers and the TLE3 polynucleotides (which could be a TLE3 mRNA, a cDNA produced by RT-PCR from mRNA, RNA produced from such cDNA, etc.). In certain embodiments, hybridization can be detected by simply adding a detectable label to the primer. In other embodiments, hybridization can be detected by using a labeled secondary primer that hybridizes specifically with the primary primer (e.g., a region of the primary primer that does not hybridize with the TLE3 marker). In yet other embodiments it may be advantageous to amplify the TLE3 marker within the cancer sample by PCR using a set of primers designed to amplify a region of the TLE3 gene. The resulting product can then be detected, e.g., using a labeled secondary primer that hybridizes with the amplified product. Those skilled in the art will appreciate variations on these embodiments.


Considerations for primer design are well known in the art and are described, for example, in Newton, et al. (eds.) PCR: Essential data Series, John Wiley & Sons; PCR Primer: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1995; White, et al. (eds.) PCR Protocols: Current methods and Applications, Methods in Molecular Biology, The Humana Press, Totowa, N.J., 1993. In addition, a variety of computer programs known in the art may be used to select appropriate primers.


In general, a detectable label may be directly detectable or indirectly detectable, e.g., through combined action with one or more additional members of a signal producing system. Examples of directly detectable labels include radioactive, paramagnetic, fluorescent, light scattering, absorptive and colorimetric labels. Examples of indirectly detectable include chemiluminescent labels, e.g., enzymes that are capable of converting a substrate to a chromogenic product such as alkaline phosphatase, horseradish peroxidase and the like.


Once a labeled primer has hybridized with the TLE3 marker, the complex may be visualized or detected in a variety of ways, with the particular manner of detection being chosen based on the particular detectable label, where representative detection means include, e.g., scintillation counting, autoradiography, measurement of paramagnetism, fluorescence measurement, light absorption measurement, measurement of light scattering and the like.


In general, hybridization between a primer and the TLE3 marker may be assayed by contacting the primer with a cancer sample that includes the marker. Depending upon the nature of the cancer sample, appropriate methods include, but are not limited to, microarray analysis, in situ hybridization, Northern blot, and various nucleic acid amplification techniques such as PCR, RT-PCR, quantitative PCR, the ligase chain reaction, etc.


Identification of Novel Therapies

The predictive power of TLE3 is useful according to the present invention not only to classify cancers with respect to their likely responsiveness to known therapies, but also to identify potential new therapies or therapeutic agents that could be useful in the treatment of cancer.


Indeed, TLE3 represents an attractive candidate for identification of new therapeutic agents (e.g., via screens to detect compounds or entities that bind or hybridize to the marker, preferably with at least a specified affinity and/or specificity, and/or via screens to detect compounds or entities that modulate (i.e., increase or decrease) expression, localization, modification, or activity of the marker. Thus, in one embodiment the present invention provides methods comprising steps of contacting a test compound with a cell expressing the TLE3 marker (e.g., individual engineered cells or in the context of a tissue, etc.); and determining whether the test compound modulates the expression, localization, modification, or activity of the TLE3 marker. In many instances, interaction partners or primers (e.g., antisense or RNAi primers) themselves may prove to be useful therapeutics.


Thus the present invention provides interaction partners and primers that are themselves useful therapeutic agents. For example, binding by an antibody raised against TLE3 to cancerous cells might inhibit growth of those cells. Alternatively or additionally, interaction partners defined or prepared according to the present invention could be used to deliver a therapeutic agent to a cancer cell. In particular, interaction partners (e.g., an antibody raised against TLE3) may be coupled to one or more therapeutic agents. Suitable agents in this regard include radionuclides and drugs. Preferred radionuclides include 90Y, 123I, 125I, 131I, 186Re, 188Re, 211At and 212Bi. Preferred drugs include chlorambucil, ifosphamide, meclorethamine, cyclophosphamide, carboplatin, cisplatin, procarbazine, decarbazine, carmustine, cytarabine, hydroxyurea, mercaptopurine, methotrexate, paclitaxel, docetaxel, thioguanine, 5-fluorouracil, actinomycin D, bleomycin, daunorubicin, doxorubicin, etoposide, vinblastine, vincristine, L-asparginase, adrenocorticosteroids, canciclovir triphosphate, adenine arabinonucleoside triphosphate, 5-aziridinyl-4-hydroxylamino-2-nitrobenzamide, acrolein, phosphoramide mustard, 6-methylpurine, etoposide, benzoic acid mustard, cyanide and nitrogen mustard.


According to such embodiments, the therapeutic agent may be coupled with an interaction partner by direct or indirect covalent or non-covalent interactions. A direct interaction between a therapeutic agent and an interaction partner is possible when each possesses a substituent capable of reacting with the other. For example, a nucleophilic group, such as an amino or sulfhydryl group, on one may be capable of reacting with a carbonyl-containing group, such as an anhydride or an acid halide, or with an alkyl group containing a good leaving group (e.g., a halide) on the other. Indirect interactions might involve a linker group that is itself non-covalently bound to both the therapeutic agent and the interaction partner. A linker group can function as a spacer to distance an interaction partner from an agent in order to avoid interference with association capabilities. A linker group can also serve to increase the chemical reactivity of a substituent on an agent or an interaction partner and thus increase the coupling efficiency. An increase in chemical reactivity may also facilitate the use of agents, or functional groups on agents, which otherwise would not be possible.


It will be evident to those skilled in the art that a variety of bifunctional or polyfunctional reagents, both homo- and hetero-functional (such as those described in the catalog of the Pierce Chemical Co., Rockford, Ill.), may be employed as the linker group. Coupling may be effected, for example, through amino groups, carboxyl groups, sulfydryl groups or oxidized carbohydrate residues. There are numerous references describing such methodology, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,671,958, to Rodwell et al. It will further be appreciated that a therapeutic agent and an interaction partner may be coupled via non-covalent interactions, e.g., ligand/receptor type interactions. Any ligand/receptor pair with a sufficient stability and specificity to operate in the context of the invention may be employed to couple a therapeutic agent and an interaction partner. To give but an example, a therapeutic agent may be covalently linked with biotin and an interaction partner with avidin. The strong non-covalent binding of biotin to avidin would then allow for coupling of the therapeutic agent and the interaction partner. Typical ligand/receptor pairs include protein/co-factor and enzyme/substrate pairs. Besides the commonly used biotin/avidin pair, these include without limitation, biotin/streptavidin, digoxigenin/anti-digoxigenin, FK506/FK506-binding protein (FKBP), rapamycin/FKBP, cyclophilin/cyclosporin and glutathione/glutathione transferase pairs. Other suitable ligand/receptor pairs would be recognized by those skilled in the art, e.g., monoclonal antibodies paired with a epitope tag such as, without limitation, glutathione-S-transferase (GST), c-myc, FLAG® and maltose binding protein (MBP) and further those described in Kessler pp. 105-152 of Advances in Mutagenesis” Ed. by Kessler, Springer-Verlag, 1990; “Affinity Chromatography: Methods and Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology)” Ed. by Pascal Baillon, Humana Press, 2000; and “Immobilized Affinity Ligand Techniques” by Hermanson et al., Academic Press, 1992.


Where a therapeutic agent is more potent when free from the interaction partner, it may be desirable to use a linker group which is cleavable during or upon internalization into a cell. A number of different cleavable linker groups have been described. The mechanisms for the intracellular release of an agent from these linker groups include cleavage by reduction of a disulfide bond (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,489,710 to Spitler), by irradiation of a photolabile bond (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,625,014 to Senter et al.), by hydrolysis of derivatized amino acid side chains (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,638,045 to Kohn et al.), by serum complement-mediated hydrolysis (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,671,958 to Rodwell et al.) and by acid-catalyzed hydrolysis (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,569,789 to Blattler et al.).


In certain embodiments, it may be desirable to couple more than one therapeutic agent to an interaction partner. In one embodiment, multiple molecules of an agent are coupled to one interaction partner molecule. In another embodiment, more than one type of therapeutic agent may be coupled to one interaction partner molecule. Regardless of the particular embodiment, preparations with more than one agent may be prepared in a variety of ways. For example, more than one agent may be coupled directly to an interaction partner molecule, or linkers that provide multiple sites for attachment can be used.


Alternatively, a carrier can be used. A carrier may bear the agents in a variety of ways, including covalent bonding either directly or via a linker group. Suitable carriers include proteins such as albumins (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,507,234 to Kato et al.), peptides, and polysaccharides such as aminodextran (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,699,784 to Shih et al.). A carrier may also bear an agent by non-covalent bonding or by encapsulation, such as within a liposome vesicle (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,429,008 to Martin et al. and 4,873,088 to Mayhew et al.). Carriers specific for radionuclide agents include radiohalogenated small molecules and chelating compounds. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,735,792 to Srivastava discloses representative radiohalogenated small molecules and their synthesis. A radionuclide chelate may be formed from chelating compounds that include those containing nitrogen and sulfur atoms as the donor atoms for binding the metal, or metal oxide, radionuclide. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,673,562 to Davison et al. discloses representative chelating compounds and their synthesis.


When interaction partners are themselves therapeutics, it will be understood that, in many cases, any interaction partner that binds the same marker may be so used.


In one preferred embodiment of the invention, the therapeutic agents (whether interaction partners or otherwise) are antibodies, e.g., an antibody against the TLE3 marker. As is well known in the art, when using an antibody or fragment thereof for therapeutic purposes it may prove advantageous to use a “humanized” or “veneered” version of an antibody of interest to reduce any potential immunogenic reaction. In general, “humanized” or “veneered” antibody molecules and fragments thereof minimize unwanted immunological responses toward antihuman antibody molecules which can limit the duration and effectiveness of therapeutic applications of those moieties in human recipients.


A number of “humanized” antibody molecules comprising an antigen binding portion derived from a non-human immunoglobulin have been described in the art, including chimeric antibodies having rodent variable regions and their associated complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) fused to human constant domains (e.g., see Winter et al., Nature 349:293, 1991; Lobuglio et al., Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 86:4220, 1989; Shaw et al., J. Immunol. 138:4534, 1987; and Brown et al., Cancer Res. 47:3577, 1987), rodent CDRs grafted into a human supporting framework region (FR) prior to fusion with an appropriate human antibody constant domain (e.g., see Riechmann et al., Nature 332:323, 1988; Verhoeyen et al., Science 239:1534, 1988; and Jones et al. Nature 321:522, 1986) and rodent CDRs supported by recombinantly veneered rodent FRs (e.g., see European Patent Publication No. 519,596, published Dec. 23, 1992). It is to be understood that the invention also encompasses “fully human” antibodies produced using the XenoMouse™ technology (AbGenix Corp., Fremont, Calif.) according to the techniques described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,075,181.


Yet further, so-called “veneered” antibodies may be used that include “veneered FRs”. The process of veneering involves selectively replacing FR residues from, e.g., a murine heavy or light chain variable region, with human FR residues in order to provide a xenogeneic molecule comprising an antigen binding portion which retains substantially all of the native FR protein folding structure. Veneering techniques are based on the understanding that the antigen binding characteristics of an antigen binding portion are determined primarily by the structure and relative disposition of the heavy and light chain CDR sets within the antigen-association surface (e.g., see Davies et al., Ann. Rev. Biochem. 59:439, 1990). Thus, antigen association specificity can be preserved in a humanized antibody only wherein the CDR structures, their interaction with each other and their interaction with the rest of the variable region domains are carefully maintained. By using veneering techniques, exterior (e.g., solvent-accessible) FR residues which are readily encountered by the immune system are selectively replaced with human residues to provide a hybrid molecule that comprises either a weakly immunogenic, or substantially non-immunogenic veneered surface.


Preferably, interaction partners suitable for use as therapeutics (or therapeutic agent carriers) exhibit high specificity for the target marker (e.g., TLE3) and low background binding to other markers. In certain embodiments, monoclonal antibodies are preferred for therapeutic purposes.


Pharmaceutical Compositions

As mentioned above, the present invention provides new therapies and methods for identifying these. In certain embodiments, an interaction partner or primer may be a useful therapeutic agent. Alternatively or additionally, interaction partners defined or prepared according to the present invention bind to markers (e.g., TLE3) that serve as targets for therapeutic agents. Also, inventive interaction partners may be used to deliver a therapeutic agent to a cancer cell. For example, interaction partners provided in accordance with the present invention may be coupled to one or more therapeutic agents.


The invention includes pharmaceutical compositions comprising these inventive therapeutic agents. In general, a pharmaceutical composition will include a therapeutic agent in addition to one or more inactive agents such as a sterile, biocompatible carrier including, but not limited to, sterile water, saline, buffered saline, or dextrose solution. The pharmaceutical compositions may be administered either alone or in combination with other therapeutic agents including other chemotherapeutic agents, hormones, vaccines and/or radiation therapy. By “in combination with”, here and elsewhere in the specification, it is not intended to imply that the agents must be administered at the same time or formulated for delivery together, although these methods of delivery are within the scope of the invention. In general, each agent will be administered at a dose and on a time schedule determined for that agent. Additionally, the invention encompasses the delivery of the inventive pharmaceutical compositions in combination with agents that may improve their bioavailability, reduce or modify their metabolism, inhibit their excretion, or modify their distribution within the body. Although the pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention can be used for treatment of any subject (e.g., any animal) in need thereof, they are most preferably used in the treatment of humans.


The pharmaceutical compositions of this invention can be administered to humans and other animals by a variety of routes including oral, intravenous, intramuscular, intra-arterial, subcutaneous, intraventricular, transdermal, rectal, intravaginal, intraperitoneal, topical (as by powders, ointments, or drops), bucal, or as an oral or nasal spray or aerosol. In general the most appropriate route of administration will depend upon a variety of factors including the nature of the agent (e.g., its stability in the environment of the gastrointestinal tract), the condition of the patient (e.g., whether the patient is able to tolerate oral administration), etc. At present the intravenous route is most commonly used to deliver therapeutic antibodies. However, the invention encompasses the delivery of the inventive pharmaceutical composition by any appropriate route taking into consideration likely advances in the sciences of drug delivery.


General considerations in the formulation and manufacture of pharmaceutical agents may be found, for example, in Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, 19th ed., Mack Publishing Co., Easton, Pa., 1995.


EXEMPLIFICATION
Example 1
Raising Antibodies

This example describes a method that was employed to generate the TLE3 antibodies used in these Examples. Similar methods may be used to generate an antibody that binds to any marker of interest (e.g., to proteins that are or are derived from other markers listed in Appendix A). In some cases, antibodies may be obtained from commercial sources (e.g., Chemicon, Dako, Oncogene Research Products, NeoMarkers, etc.) or other publicly available sources (e.g., Imperial Cancer Research Technology, etc.).


Materials and Solutions





    • Anisole (Cat. No. A4405, Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.)

    • 2,2′-azino-di-(3-ethyl-benzthiazoline-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) (Cat. No. A6499, Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.)

    • Activated maleimide Keyhole Limpet Hemocyanin (Cat. No. 77106, Pierce, Rockford, Ill.)

    • Keyhole Limpet Hemocyanin (Cat. No. 77600, Pierce, Rockford, Ill.)

    • Phosphoric Acid (H3PO4) (Cat. No. P6560, Sigma)

    • Glacial Acetic Acid (Cat No. BP1185-500, Fisher)

    • EDC (EDAC) (Cat No. 341006, Calbiochem)

    • 25% Glutaraldehyde (Cat No. G-5882, Sigma)

    • Glycine (Cat No. G-8898, Sigma)

    • Biotin (Cat. No. B2643, Sigma)

    • Boric acid (Cat. No. B0252, Sigma)

    • Sepharose 4B (Cat. No. 17-0120-01, LKB/Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden)

    • Bovine Serum Albumin (LP) (Cat. No. 100 350, Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.)

    • Cyanogen bromide (Cat. No. C6388, Sigma)

    • Dialysis tubing Spectra/Por Membrane MWCO: 6-8,000 (Cat. No. 132 665, Spectrum Industries, Laguna Hills, Calif.)

    • Dimethyl formamide (DMF) (Cat. No. 22705-6, Aldrich, Milwaukee, Wis.)

    • DIC (Cat. No. BP 592-500, Fisher)

    • Ethanedithiol (Cat. No. 39, 802-0, Aldrich)

    • Ether (Cat. No. TX 1275-3, EM Sciences)

    • Ethylenediaminetetraacetatic acid (EDTA) (Cat. No. BP 120-1, Fisher, Springfield, N.J.)

    • 1-ethyl-3-(3′ dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide, HCL (EDC) (Cat. no. 341-006, Calbiochem, San Diego, Calif.)

    • Freund's Adjuvant, complete (Cat. No. M-0638-50B, Lee Laboratories, Grayson, Ga.)

    • Freund's Adjuvant, incomplete (Cat. No. M-0639-50B, Lee Laboratories)

    • Fritted chromatography columns (Column part No. 12131011; Frit Part No. 12131029, Varian Sample Preparation Products, Harbor City, Calif.)

    • Gelatin from Bovine Skin (Cat. No. G9382, Sigma)

    • Goat anti-rabbit IgG, biotinylated (Cat. No. A 0418, Sigma)

    • HOBt (Cat. No. 01-62-0008, Calbiochem)

    • Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (Cat. No. 814 393, Boehringer Mannheim)

    • HRP-Streptavidin (Cat. No. S 5512, Sigma)

    • Hydrochloric Acid (Cat. No. 71445-500, Fisher)

    • Hydrogen Peroxide 30% w/w (Cat. No. H1009, Sigma)

    • Methanol (Cat. No. A412-20, Fisher)

    • Microtiter plates, 96 well (Cat. No. 2595, Corning-Costar, Pleasanton, Calif.)

    • N— -Fmoc protected amino acids from Calbiochem. See '97-'98 Catalog pp. 1-45.

    • N— -Fmoc protected amino acids attached to Wang Resin from Calbiochem. See '97-'98 Catalog pp. 161-164.

    • NMP (Cat. No. CAS 872-50-4, Burdick and Jackson, Muskegon, Mich.)

    • Peptide (Synthesized by Research Genetics. Details given below)

    • Piperidine (Cat. No. 80640, Fluka, available through Sigma)

    • Sodium Bicarbonate (Cat. No. BP328-1, Fisher)

    • Sodium Borate (Cat. No. B9876, Sigma)

    • Sodium Carbonate (Cat. No. BP357-1, Fisher)

    • Sodium Chloride (Cat. No. BP 358-10, Fisher)

    • Sodium Hydroxide (Cat. No. SS 255-1, Fisher)

    • Streptavidin (Cat. No. 1 520, Boehringer Mannheim)

    • Thioanisole (Cat. No. T-2765, Sigma)

    • Trifluoroacetic acid (Cat. No. TX 1275-3, EM Sciences)

    • Tween-20 (Cat. No. BP 337-500, Fisher)

    • Wetbox (Rectangular Servin' Saver™ Part No. 3862, Rubbermaid, Wooster, Ohio)

    • BBS—Borate Buffered Saline with EDTA dissolved in distilled water (pH 8.2 to 8.4 with HCl or NaOH), 25 mM Sodium borate (Borax), 100 mM Boric Acid, 75 mM NaCl and 5 mM EDTA.

    • 0.1 N HCl in saline as follows: concentrated HCl (8.3 ml/0.917 liter distilled water) and 0.154 M NaCl

    • Glycine (pH 2.0 and pH 3.0) dissolved in distilled water and adjusted to the desired pH, 0.1 M glycine and 0.154 M NaCl.

    • 5× Borate 1× Sodium Chloride dissolved in distilled water, 0.11 M NaCl, 60 mM Sodium Borate and 250 mM Boric Acid.

    • Substrate Buffer in distilled water adjusted to pH 4.0 with sodium hydroxide, 50 to 100 mM Citric Acid.

    • AA solution: HOBt is dissolved in NMP (8.8 grams HOBt to 1 liter NMP). Fmoc-N-α-amino at a concentration at 0.53 M.

    • DIC solution: 1 part DIC to 3 parts NMP.

    • Deprotecting solution: 1 part Piperidine to 3 parts DMF.

    • Reagent R: 2 parts anisole, 3 parts ethanedithiol, 5 parts thioanisole and 90 parts trifluoroacetic acid.





Equipment





    • MRX Plate Reader (Dynatech, Chantilly, Va.)

    • Hamilton Eclipse (Hamilton Instruments, Reno, Nev.)

    • Beckman TJ-6 Centrifuge (Model No. TJ-6, Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, Calif.)

    • Chart Recorder (Recorder 1 Part No. 18-1001-40, Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology)

    • UV Monitor (Uvicord SII Part No. 18-1004-50, Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology)

    • Amicon Stirred Cell Concentrator (Model 8400, Amicon, Beverly, Mass.)

    • 30 kD MW cut-off filter (Cat. No. YM-30 Membranes Cat. No. 13742, Amicon)

    • Multi-channel Automated Pipettor (Cat. No. 4880, Corning Costar, Cambridge, Mass.)

    • pH Meter Corning 240 (Corning Science Products, Corning Glassworks, Corning, N.Y.)

    • ACT396 peptide synthesizer (Advanced ChemTech, Louisville, Ky.)

    • Vacuum dryer (Box from Labconco, Kansas City, Mo. and Pump from Alcatel, Laurel, Md.).

    • Lyophilizer (Unitop 600sl in tandem with Freezemobile 12, both from Virtis, Gardiner, N.Y.)





Peptide Selection

Peptide or peptides against which antibodies would be raised were selected from within the protein sequence of interest using a program that uses the Hopp/Woods method (described in Hopp and Woods, Mol. Immunol. 20:483, 1983 and Hopp and Woods, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 78:3824, 1981). The program uses a scanning window that identifies peptide sequences of 15-20 amino acids containing several putative antigenic epitopes as predicted by low solvent accessibility. This is in contrast to most implementations of the Hopp/Woods method, which identify single short (˜6 amino acids) presumptive antigenic epitopes. Occasionally the predicted solvent accessibility was further assessed by PHD prediction of loop structures (described in Rost and Sander, Proteins 20:216, 1994). Preferred peptide sequences display minimal similarity with additional known human proteins. Similarity was determined by performing BLASTP alignments, using a wordsize of 2 (described in Altschul et al., J. Mol. Biol. 215:403, 1990). All alignments given an EXPECT value less than 1000 were examined and alignments with similarities of greater than 60% or more than four residues in an exact contiguous non-gapped alignment forced those peptides to be rejected. When it was desired to target regions of proteins exposed outside the cell membrane, extracellular regions of the protein of interest were determined from the literature or as defined by predicted transmembrane domains using a hidden Markov model (described in Krogh et al., J. Mol. Biol. 305:567, 2001). When the peptide sequence was in an extracellular domain, peptides were rejected if they contained N-linked glycosylation sites. As shown in Appendix A, for the preparation of TLE3 antibodies a single peptide was used having the amino acid sequence KNHHELDHRERESSAN (SEQ ID NO. 383). Appendix A provides one to three peptide sequences that can be used in preparing antibodies against other markers.


Peptide Synthesis

The sequence of the desired peptide was provided to the peptide synthesizer. The C-terminal residue was determined and the appropriate Wang Resin was attached to the reaction vessel. The peptide or peptides were synthesized C-terminus to N-terminus by adding one amino acid at a time using a synthesis cycle. Which amino acid is added was controlled by the peptide synthesizer, which looks to the sequence of the peptide that was entered into its database. The synthesis steps were performed as follows:


Step 1—Resin Swelling: Added 2 ml DMF, incubated 30 minutes, drained DMF.


Step 2—Synthesis cycle (repeated over the length of the peptide)

    • 2a—Deprotection: 1 ml deprotecting solution was added to the reaction vessel and incubated for 20 minutes.
    • 2b—Wash Cycle
    • 2c—Coupling: 750 ml of amino acid solution (changed as the sequence listed in the peptide synthesizer dictated) and 250 ml of DIC solution were added to the reaction vessel. The reaction vessel was incubated for thirty minutes and washed once. The coupling step was repeated once.
    • 2d—Wash Cycle


Step 3—Final Deprotection: Steps 2a and 2b were performed one last time.


Resins were deswelled in methanol (rinsed twice in 5 ml methanol, incubated 5 minutes in 5 ml methanol, rinsed in 5 ml methanol) and then vacuum dried.


Peptide was removed from the resin by incubating 2 hours in reagent R and then precipitated into ether. Peptide was washed in ether and then vacuum dried. Peptide was resolubilized in diH2O, frozen and lyophilized overnight.


Conjugation of Peptide with Keyhole Limpet Hemocyanin


Peptide (6 mg) was conjugated with Keyhole Limpet Hemocyanin (KLH). If the selected peptide includes at least one cysteine, three aliquots (2 mg) can be dissolved in PBS (2 ml) and coupled to KLH via glutaraldehyde, EDC or maleimide activated KLH (2 mg) in 2 ml of PBS for a total volume of 4 ml. When the peptide lacks cysteine (as in the TLE3 peptide), two aliquots (3 mg) can be coupled via glutaraldehyde and EDC methods.


Maleimide coupling can be accomplished by mixing 2 mg of peptide with 2 mg of maleimide-activated KLH dissolved in PBS (4 ml) and incubating 4 hr.


EDC coupling can be accomplished by mixing 2 mg of peptide, 2 mg unmodified KLH, and 20 mg of EDC in 4 ml PBS (lowered to pH 5 by the addition of phosphoric acid), and incubating for 4 hours. The reaction is then stopped by the slow addition of 1.33 ml acetic acid (pH 4.2). When using EDC to couple 3 mg of peptide, the amounts listed above are increased by a factor of 1.5.


Glutaraldehyde coupling occurs when 2 mg of peptide are mixed with 2 mg of KLH in 0.9 ml of PBS. 0.9 ml of 0.2% glutaraldehyde in PBS is added and mixed for one hour. 0.46 ml of 1 M glycine in PBS is added and mixed for one hour. When using glutaraldehyde to couple 3 mg of peptide, the above amounts are increased by a factor of 1.5.


The conjugated aliquots were subsequently repooled, mixed for two hours, dialyzed in 1 liter PBS and lyophilized.


Immunization of Rabbits

Two New Zealand White Rabbits were injected with 250 μg (total) KLH conjugated peptide in an equal volume of complete Freund's adjuvant and saline in a total volume of 1 ml. 100 μg KLH conjugated peptide in an equal volume of incomplete Freund's Adjuvant and saline were then injected into three to four subcutaneous dorsal sites for a total volume of 1 ml two, six, eight and twelve weeks after the first immunization. The immunization schedule was as follows:


















Day 0
Pre-immune bleed, primary immunization



Day 15
1st boost



Day 27
1st bleed



Day 44
2nd boost



Day 57
2nd bleed and 3rd boost



Day 69
3rd bleed



Day 84
4th boost



Day 98
4th bleed










Collection of Rabbit Serum

The rabbits were bled (30 to 50 ml) from the auricular artery. The blood was allowed to clot at room temperature for 15 minutes and the serum was separated from the clot using an IEC DPR-6000 centrifuge at 5000 g. Cell-free serum was decanted gently into a clean test tube and stored at −20° C. for affinity purification.


Determination of Antibody Titer

All solutions with the exception of wash solution were added by the Hamilton Eclipse, a liquid handling dispenser. The antibody titer was determined in the rabbits using an ELISA assay with peptide on the solid phase. Flexible high binding ELISA plates were passively coated with peptide diluted in BBS (100 μl, 1 μg/well) and the plate was incubated at 4° C. in a wetbox overnight (air-tight container with moistened cotton balls). The plates were emptied and then washed three times with BBS containing 0.1% Tween-20 (BBS-TW) by repeated filling and emptying using a semi-automated plate washer. The plates were blocked by completely filling each well with BBS-TW containing 1% BSA and 0.1% gelatin (BBS-TW-BG) and incubating for 2 hours at room temperature. The plates were emptied and sera of both pre- and post-immune serum were added to wells. The first well contained sera at 1:50 in BBS. The sera were then serially titrated eleven more times across the plate at a ratio of 1:1 for a final (twelfth) dilution of 1:204,800. The plates were incubated overnight at 4° C. The plates were emptied and washed three times as described.


Biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (100 μl) was added to each microtiter plate test well and incubated for four hours at room temperature. The plates were emptied and washed three times. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated Streptavidin (100 μl diluted 1:10,000 in BBS-TW-BG) was added to each well and incubated for two hours at room temperature. The plates were emptied and washed three times. The ABTS was prepared fresh from stock by combining 10 ml of citrate buffer (0.1 M at pH 4.0), 0.2 ml of the stock solution (15 mg/ml in water) and 10 μl of 30% hydrogen peroxide. The ABTS solution (100 μl) was added to each well and incubated at room temperature. The plates were read at 414 nm, 20 minutes following the addition of substrate.


Preparation of Peptide Affinity Purification Column:

The affinity column was prepared by conjugating 5 mg of peptide to 10 ml of cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose 4B and 5 mg of peptide to hydrazine-Sepharose 4B. Briefly, 100 μl of DMF was added to peptide (5 mg) and the mixture was vortexed until the contents were completely wetted. Water was then added (900 μl) and the contents were vortexed until the peptide dissolved. Half of the dissolved peptide (500 μl) was added to separate tubes containing 10 ml of cyanogen-bromide activated Sepharose 4B in 0.1 ml of borate buffered saline at pH 8.4 (BBS) and 10 ml of hydrazine-Sepharose 4B in 0.1 M carbonate buffer adjusted to pH 4.5 using excess EDC in citrate buffer pH 6.0. The conjugation reactions were allowed to proceed overnight at room temperature. The conjugated Sepharose was pooled and loaded onto fitted columns, washed with 10 ml of BBS, blocked with 10 ml of 1 M glycine and washed with 10 ml 0.1 M glycine adjusted to pH 2.5 with HCl and re-neutralized in BBS. The column was washed with enough volume for the optical density at 280 nm to reach baseline.


Affinity Purification of Antibodies

The peptide affinity column was attached to a UV monitor and chart recorder. The titered rabbit antiserum was thawed and pooled. The serum was diluted with one volume of BBS and allowed to flow through the columns at 10 ml per minute. The non-peptide immunoglobulins and other proteins were washed from the column with excess BBS until the optical density at 280 nm reached baseline. The columns were disconnected and the affinity purified column was eluted using a stepwise pH gradient from pH 7.0 to 1.0. The elution was monitored at 280 nm and fractions containing antibody (pH 3.0 to 1.0) were collected directly into excess 0.5 M BBS. Excess buffer (0.5 M BBS) in the collection tubes served to neutralize the antibodies collected in the acidic fractions of the pH gradient.


The entire procedure was repeated with “depleted” serum to ensure maximal recovery of antibodies. The eluted material was concentrated using a stirred cell apparatus and a membrane with a molecular weight cutoff of 30 kD. The concentration of the final preparation was determined using an optical density reading at 280 nm. The concentration was determined using the following formula: mg/ml=OD280/1.4.


It will be appreciated that in certain embodiments, additional steps may be used to purify antibodies of the invention. In particular, it may prove advantageous to repurify antibodies, e.g., against one of the peptides that was used in generating the antibodies. It is to be understood that the present invention encompasses antibodies that have been prepared with such additional purification or repurification steps. It will also be appreciated that the purification process may affect the binding between samples and the inventive antibodies.


Example 2
Preparing and Staining Tissue Arrays

This example describes a method that was employed to prepare the tissue arrays that were used in the Examples. This example also describes how the antibody staining was performed.


Tissue arrays were prepared by inserting full-thickness cores from a large number of paraffin blocks (donor blocks) that contain fragments of tissue derived from many different patients and/or different tissues or fragments of tissues from a single patient, into a virgin paraffin block (recipient block) in a grid pattern at designated locations in a grid. A standard slide of the paraffin embedded tissue (donor block) was then made which contained a thin section of the specimen amenable to H & E staining A trained pathologist, or the equivalent versed in evaluating tumor and normal tissue, designated the region of interest for sampling on the tissue array (e.g., a tumor area as opposed to stroma). A commercially available tissue arrayer from Beecher Instruments was then used to remove a core from the donor block which was then inserted into the recipient block at a designated location. The process was repeated until all donor blocks had been inserted into the recipient block. The recipient block was then thin-sectioned to yield 50-300 slides containing cores from all cases inserted into the block.


The selected antibodies were then used to perform immunohistochemical staining using the DAKO Envision+, Peroxidase IHC kit (DAKO Corp., Carpenteria, Calif.) with DAB substrate according to the manufacturer's instructions. FIG. 1 shows exemplary IHC staining images of samples that are TLE3-negative (S0643−) and TLE3-positive (S0643+).


Example 3
TLE3 Expression Correlates with Response to Chemotherapy in Cancer Patients

Tumor samples from two different breast cancer cohorts—Huntsville Hospital (HH) and Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RP)—were stained with the TLE3 antibody of Example 1. Treatment and recurrence data were available for all patients in both cohorts. FIG. 2 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using all patients in the HH cohort after classification based on staining with the TLE3 antibody. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this breast cancer cohort (HR=0.573, p=0.004). FIG. 3 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated in a similar fashion using all patients in the RP cohort. As with the HH cohort, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker was found to correlate with improved prognosis (HR=0.239, p=0.011).


In order to determine whether TLE3 expression is correlated with response to chemotherapy, separate Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves were generated using HH cohort patients that did or did not receive chemotherapy (FIGS. 4 and 5, respectively). As shown in FIG. 4, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker lost its correlation with prognosis in patients that did not receive chemotherapy (HR=0.788, p=0.490). However, as shown in FIG. 5, the correlation was restored in patients that did receive chemotherapy (HR=0.539, p=0.013). These results demonstrate that TLE3 expression is correlated with improved response to chemotherapy (i.e., TLE3-positive cancers are more likely to respond to chemotherapy than TLE-3 negative cancers). Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort that received chemotherapy are consistent with this prediction model (see FIG. 6, HR=0.194, p=0.010). Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the UAB ovarian cancer cohort that received chemotherapy are also consistent with this prediction model (see FIG. 18, HR=0.64, p=0.049).


Example 4
Specific Chemotherapeutic Correlations

Since different patients in the HH and RP cohorts received different types of chemotherapy we were also able to determine whether TLE3 expression correlates with response to specific types of chemotherapy.



FIG. 7 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 5 that received CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil) chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in FIG. 7, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients (HR=0.398, p=0.019). Based on the results below which demonstrated a loss of correlation for patients in the HH cohort that were treated with CA (cyclophosphamide and adriamycin, HR=1.000) or CAF (cyclophosphamide, adriamycin and 5-fluorouracil, HR=1.000) we were able to establish that the predictive correlation in FIG. 7 is between TLE3 binding and treatment with methotrexate (see also FIG. 9 which combines the CA and CAF treated subsets, HR=1.030).



FIG. 8 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the HH breast cancer cohort of FIG. 5 that received CA or CAF chemotherapy (with or without a taxane). As shown in the Figure, the correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis loses significance in this subset of treated patients (HR=0.666, p=0.22). When the curves were generated using patients that received CA or CAF chemotherapy only (i.e., without a taxane) the significance was further reduced (see FIG. 9, HR=1.030, p=0.95). However, the correlation was restored in patients that received CA or CAF in combination with a taxane (see FIG. 10, HR=0.114, p=0.038). These results demonstrate a correlation between TLE3 binding and treatment with a taxane.



FIG. 11 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received CA chemotherapy only (i.e., without a taxane). Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, there is no correlation between antibody binding to the TLE3 marker and prognosis in this subset of treated patients (HR=0.759, p=0.81). The correlation was restored when the curves were generated using patients that received CA chemotherapy in combination with a taxane (see FIG. 12, HR=0.153, p=0.018). These results support the results of FIGS. 8 and 9 that were obtained using samples from the HH cohort.



FIG. 13 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received a taxane or CMF. Some of the patients receiving a taxane also received CA. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. As shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlates with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients (HR=0.137, p=0.011).



FIG. 14 shows Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients in this subset were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. The sample size was small (N=12); however, as shown in the Figure, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker showed significant correlation with improved prognosis across this subset of treated patients when measured using the Fisher Exact Test (p=0.005). In addition, of the 12 patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy, two received CA (both showed recurrence) while ten received CA with a taxane (seven showed recurrence, three did not). Notably, the three patients that did not show any recurrence were the only patients with TLE3-positive samples. These results are significant since they show that the correlation between TLE3 binding and response to chemotherapy applies irrespective of whether treatment is administered in an adjuvant or neoadjuvant setting.



FIGS. 15-17 show Kaplan-Meier recurrence curves that were generated using patients in the RP breast cancer cohort of FIG. 6 that received chemotherapy. Recurrence data from TLE3-positive and TLE3-negative patients with stage II+ (FIG. 15), stage IIb+ (FIG. 16) and stage III+ (FIG. 17) cancers were used to generate the top and bottom curves, respectively. In each case, antibody binding to the TLE3 marker correlated with improved prognosis across these subsets of treated patients. The sample size was small in the subset of FIG. 17 (N=19); however significance was obtained when measured using the Fisher Exact Test (p=0.020). These results are of clinical importance since they demonstrate that the predictive power of the TLE3 marker is independent of stage and remains significant even in patients with the worst prognosis (e.g., stage III+ patients).


Example 5
Bivariate Analysis

In order to confirm that the predictive power of TLE3 is independent of other clinical factors (e.g., age, tumor size, nodes status, necrosis, etc.) we performed bivariate statistical analysis using results from the RP breast cohort. The results are summarized in Table 1 below. As shown in the Table, prediction using TLE3 remained significant in all bivariate analyses demonstrating its independence of other clinical factors.









TABLE 1







Bivariate Analysis
















HR for
p for




Factor 1
Factor 2
N
TLE3
TLE3
HR
p





TLE3

81
0.239
0.0110




TLE3
Age
81
0.223
0.0082
0.967
0.1200


TLE3
Tumor Size
78
0.219
0.0077
1.292
0.0002


TLE3
Nodes Met Ca1
79
0.252
0.0150
1.066
0.0086


TLE3
Necrosis
72
0.232
0.0100
1.903
0.2600


TLE3
Vasc. Lymph Inv.2
74
0.205
0.0071
0.412
0.0790


TLE3
Stage
80
0.284
0.0280
2.063
0.0130


TLE3
Contains Tax3
70
0.168
0.0061
2.749
0.0980






1Nodes found with metastatic cancer.




2Vascular lymphatic invasion.




3Taxane containing regimens.





















APPENDIX A







ENTREZ

PEPTIDE 1
PEPTIDE 2
PEPTIDE 3



AGI

GENE

(SEQ ID
(SEQ ID
(SEQ ID



ID
GENE NAME
ID
ALIASES
NO.)
NO.)
NO.)
TITER






















S0011
vav 3 
10451
VAV3; VAV3 
TEESINDED
EKRTNGL
DYISKSKE
1:90-



oncogene

ONCOGENE;
IYKGLPDLI
RRTPKQV
DVKLK (3)
1:300





ONCOGENE VAV3; 
DE (1)
D (2)







vav 3 oncogene









S0017
WAP four-
10406
WFDC2; WAP5; 
EKTGVCPE
PNDKEGS
RDQCQVD
1:25-



disulfide

dJ461P17.6; major
LQADQNCT
CPQVNIN
TQCPGQM
1:500



core domain 

epididymis-specific 
QE (4)
(5)
K (6)




2

protein E4; epididymal









secretory protein E4; 









WAP four-disulfide 









core domain 2; WAP









domain containing 









protein HE4-V4;









epididymis-specific, 









whey-acidic protein 









type, four-disulfide 









core; WAP four-









disulfide









S0018
secretoglobin, 
4250
UGB2; MGB1; SCGB2A2;
SKTINPQVS
DDNATTN
NQTDETL
1:300-



family 2A, 

mammaglobin 1; 
KTEYKELL
AIDELKEC
SNVEVFM
1:1000



member 2

secretoglobin, 
QE (7)
(8)
Q (9)






family 2A, member 2









S0020
PPAR binding 
5469
RB18A; TRIP2; 
SSDDGIRPL
DGKSKDK
NKTKKKK
1:100



protein

PPARGBP; PBP; 
PEYSTEKH
PPKRKKA
SSRLPPEK






CRSP1; PPARBP; 
KK (10)
DTE (11)
(12)






CRSP200; DRIP230; 









PPAR-BINDING PROTEIN; 









PPARG binding protein;









PPAR binding protein; 









CRSP, 200-KD SUBUNIT; 









PEROXISOME 









PROLIFERATOR-ACTIVATED









RECEPTOR-BINDING 









PROTEIN; THYROID 









HORMONE RECEPTOR









INTERACTOR 2; RECOGN









S0021
hypothetical 
222256
FLJ23834; 
KNKEPLTK
KLTCTDL
EVDYENP
1:200-



protein

hypothetical protein
KGETKTAE
DS SPRSFR
SNLAAGN
1:2500



FLJ23834

FLJ23834
RD (13)
YS (14)
KYT (15)






S0022
cytochrome 
199974
CYP4Z1; cytochrome
KTLQVFNP
QHFAIIEC
RKFLAPD
1:50-



P450 

P450 4Z1; cytochrome
LRFSRENSE
KVAVALT
HSRPPQPV
1:500



4Z1

P450, family 4,
KIH (16)
(17)
RQ (18)






subfamily Z,









polypeptide 1









S0024
RAS-like, 
85004
RERG; RAS-like,
MAKSAEV
VLPLKNIL
YELCREV
1:900-



estrogen-

estrogen-regulated,
KLAIFGRA
DEIKKPK
RRRRMVQ
1:2700



regulated, 

growth-inhibitor
GVGK (19)
N (20)
GKT (21)




growth-









inhibitor











S0032
fatty acid 
2170
MDGI; O-FABP; 
TKPTTIIEK
KNTEISFK
HLQKWD
1:225



binding 

FABP3; FABP11; H-
NGDILTLK
LGVEFDE
GQETTLV




protein 3, 

FABP; FATTY ACID-
TH (22)
(23)
RE (24)




muscle and 

BINDING PROTEIN, 







heart (mammary-

SKELETAL MUSCLE; 







derived growth

Fatty acid-binding 







inhibitor)

protein 3, muscle; 









fatty acid binding 









protein 11; FATTY 









ACID-BINDING 









PROTEIN, MUSCLE 









AND HEART; fatty 









acid binding 









protein 3, muscle 









and heart 









(mammary-de









S0036
gamma-
2568
GABRP; GAMMA-
DGNDVEFT
LQQMAA
KRKISFAS
1:250-



aminobutyric

AMINOBUTYRIC 
WLRGNDS
KDRGTTK
IEISSDNV
1:500



acid (GABA) A

ACID RECEPTOR, 
VRGLEH
EVEEVS
DYSD (27)




receptor, pi

PI; GABA-A 
(25)
(26)







RECEPTOR, PI 









POLYPEPTIDE; 









gamma-aminobutyric 









acid (GABA) A 









receptor, pi









S0037
annexin A8
244
ANX8; ANXA8; 
QRQQIAKS
REIMKAY
EEYEKIAN
1:30-





annexin VIII;
FKAQFGKD
EEDYGSS
KSIEDSIK
1:40





annexin A8
LTE (28)
LEEDIQ
SE (30)








(29)







S0039
CDNA 
134111
similar to 
EGGSLVPA
RKAGKSK
KTHEKYG
1:50-



FLJ25076 

3110006E14Rik 
ARQQHCTQ
KSFSRKE
WVTPPVS
1:30000



fis, clone

protein;
VRSRR (31)
AE (32)
DG (33)




CBL06117

CDNA FLJ25076 









fis, clone 









CBL06117









S0040
ATP-binding 
5243
P-gp; PGY1; CLCS; 
MDLEGDR
NLEDLMS
RGSQAQD
1:200-



cassette,

ABCB1; ABC20; 
NGGAKKK
NITNRSDI
RKLSTKE
1:400



sub-family B

CD243; GP170; 
N (34)
NDTG (35)
A (36)




(MDR/TAP), 

MDR1; doxorubicin 







member 1

resistance; 









colchicin 









sensitivity; P-









GLYCOPROTEIN 1; 









multidrug 









resistance 1; P 









glycoprotein 1; 









ATP-binding 









cassette sub-









family B member









1; ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY B, 









MEMBER 1; ATP-bin









S0041
ATP-binding 
5244
MDR3; PGY3; PFIC-
MDLEAAK
NFSFPVNF
KNSQMCQ
1:60-



cassette,

3; ABCB4; ABC21;
NGTAWRPT
SLSLLNPG
KSLDVET
1:300



sub-family B

MDR2/3; P-
SAE (37)
K (38)
DG (39)




(MDR/TAP), 

GLYCOPROTEIN 3;







member

MULTIDRUG







4

RESISTANCE 3; P-









glycoprotein-3/









multiple drug









resistance-3; P









glycoprotein 3/









multiple drug









resistance 3;









ATP-binding









cassette, sub-









family B (MDR/TAP),









member 4; ATP-









binding cassette,









sub









S0042
ATP-binding 
4363
ABCC1; MRP1; GS-X; 
MALRGFCS
KNWKKE
DSIERRPV
1:40-



cassette,

ABC29; multidrug 
ADGSD (40)
CAKTRKQ
KDGGGTN
1:500



sub-family C

resistance protein; 

PVK (41)
S (42)




(CFTR/MRP),

MULTIDRUG 







member 1

RESISTANCE-









ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 









1; multiple drug 









resistance-associated 









protein; multiple 









drug resistance 









protein 1;









ATP-BINDING CASSETTE,









SUBFAMILY C, MEMBER 









1; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-fami









S0043
ATP-binding 
1244
MRP2; cMRP; CMOAT; 
MLEKFCNS
SILCGTFQ
ENNESSN
1:50-



cassette,

ABCC2; ABC30; DJS; 
TFWNSSFL
FQTLIRT
NPSSIAS
1:333



sub-family C

MULTIDRUG 
DSPE (43)
(44)
(45)




(CFTR/MRP),

RESISTANCE-







member 2

ASSOCIATED PROTEIN









2; canalicular 









multispecific 









organic anion 









transporter; 









MULTISPECIFIC 









ORGANIC ANION 









TRANSPORTER, 









CANALICULAR;









ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE, SUBFAMILY 









C, MEMBER 2; ATP-









binding cassette,









S0044
ATP-binding 
10257
MOAT-B; MRP4; MOATB; 
QEVKPNPL
DEISQRNR
VQDFTAF
1:20-



cassette,

ABCC4; EST170205; 
QDANICSR
QLPSDGK
WDKASET
1:100



sub-family C

MULTIDRUG 
(46)
K (47)
PTLQ (48)




(CFTR/MRP),

RESISTANCE-







member 4

ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 









4; MULTISPECIFIC









ORGANIC ANION 









TRANSPORTER B; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family C, member 









4; ATP-BINDING









CASSETTE, SUBFAMILY 









C, MEMBER 4; ATP-









binding cassette,









sub-family C (CFT









S0045
ATP-binding 
8714
MOAT-D; ABC31; MLP2; 
MDALCGSG
RKQEKQT
DPQSVER
1:2000



cassette,

ABCC3; EST90757; 
ELGSKFWD
ARHKASA
KTISPG




sub-family C

cMOAT2; MULTIDRUG 
SN (49)
A (50)
(51)




(CFTR/MRP),

RESISTANCE-







member 3

ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 









3; canicular 









multispecific









organic anion 









transporter;









CANALICULAR 









MULTISPECIFIC









ORGANIC ANION 









TRANSPORTER 2; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE,









SUBFAMILY C, MEMBER 









3; ATP-binding cas









S0046
ATP-binding 
10057
MOAT-C; ABCC5; MRP5;
MKDIDIGK
RDREDSK
SKHESSD
1:100-



cassette,

EST277145; ABC33; 
EYIIPSPGY
FRRTRPLE
VNCRRLE
1:450



sub-family C

SMRP; pABC11; MOATC; 
RS (52)
CQD (53)
R (54)




(CFTR/MRP),

MULTIDRUG 







member 5

RESISTANCE-









ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 









5; canalicular 









multispecific organic 









anion transporter C; 









ATP-binding cassette, 









sub-family C, member 









5; ATP-BINDING









CASSETTE, SUBFAMILY 









C, MEMBER 5; ATP-bi









S0047
ATP-binding 
368
MRP6; ARA; 
MAAPAEPC
DPGVVDS
HTLVAEN
1:50



cassette,

EST349056; ABCC6; 
AGQGVWN
SSSGSAA
AMNAEK




sub-family C

MOATE; PXE; MLP1; 
QTEPE (55)
GKD (56)
(57)




(CFTR/MRP),

ABC34; 







member 6

ANTHRACYCLINE 









RESISTANCE-









ASSOCIATED PROTEIN;









MULTIDRUG 









RESISTANCE-









ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 









6; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-family 









C, member 6; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY C,MEMBER 









6; ATP-binding 









cassette,









S0048
ATP-binding 
8647
BSEP; ABCB11; 
MSDSVILRS
TNSSLNQ
QEVLSKIQ
1:600



cassette,

PFIC-2; SPGP; PGY4; 
IKKFGEEN
NMTNGTR
HGHTIIS




sub-family B

PFIC2; ABC16; 
D (58)
(59)
(60)




(MDR/TAP), 

SISTER OF P-







member

GLYCOPROTEIN; bile 







11

salt export pump; 









progressive familial 









intrahepatic









cholestasis 2; ABC 









member 16, MDR/TAP 









subfamily; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY B, MEMBER 









11; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-fam









S0049
ATP-binding  
23456
MTABC2; EST20237; 
GADDPSSV
NAVASPE
KPNGIYR
1:10-



cassette,

MABC2; M-ABC2; 
TAEEIQR
FPPRFNT
KLMNKQS
1:25



sub-family B

ABCB10; 
(61)
(62)
FISA (63)




(MDR/TAP), 

MITOCHONDRIAL ABC 







member

PROTEIN 2; ATP-







10

BINDING CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY B, MEMBER 









10; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-









family B, member 









10; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-









family B MDR/TAP), 









member 10









S0050
transporter 
6890
RING4; ABC17; 
MASSRCPA
QGGSGNP
EFVGDGI
1:80



1, ATP-binding

D6S114E; ABCB2; 
PRGCR (64)
VRR (65)
YNNTMG




cassette, 

TAP1; APT1; 


HVHS (66)




sub-family 

PEPTIDE 







B (MDR/TAP)

TRANSPORTER PSF1;









TRANSPORTER, ABC, 









MHC, 1; ABC 









transporter, MHC 









1; antigen peptide 









transporter 1; 









peptide supply









factor 1; ABC 









TRANSPORTER, MHC, 









1; ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY B, 









MEMBER 2;









TRANSPORTER









S0052
ATP-binding 
6833
SUR1; MRP8; PHHI; 
MPLAFCGS
DHLGKEN
EIREEQCA
1:25-



cassette,

ABC36; ABCC8; 
ENHSAAYR
DVFQPKT
PHEPTPQG
1:150



sub-family C

HRINS; sulfonylurea 
(67)
QFLG (68)
(69)




(CFTR/MRP),

receptor 







member 8

(hyperinsulinemia); 









SULFONYLUREA 









RECEPTOR,









BETA-CELL HIGH-









AFFINITY; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family C,









member 8; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY C,









MEMBER 8; ATP-









binding cassette,









sub-family C









S0053
ATP-binding 
10060
ABCC9; ABC37; 
MSLSFCGN
QRVNETQ
DEIGDDS
1:25-



cassette,

sulfonylurea 
NISS (70)
NGTNNTT
WRTGESS
1:50



sub-family C

receptor 2A; ATP-

GISE (71)
LPFE (72)




(CFTR/MRP),

BINDING CASSETTE, 







member 9

SUBFAMILY C, 









MEMBER 9; ATP-









binding cassette,









sub-family C 









(CFTR/MRP), member 









9; ATP-binding









cassette, sub-









family C, member 9 









isoform SUR2B; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family C,









member 9 isoform









S0055
integral 
9445
E25B; ABRI; E3-16; 
MVKVTFNS
QTIEENIKI
HDKETYK
1:450-



membrane

FBD; BRI2; BRICD2B; 
ALAQKEAK
FEEEEVE
LQRRETIK
1:500



protein 2B

ITM2B; BRI GENE; 
KDEPK (73)
(74)
GIQKRE






BRICHOS domain 


(75)






containing 2B; 









integral membrane 









protein 2B









S0057
ankyrin 3, 
288
ankyrin-G; ANK3; 
MAHAASQ
HKKETES
EGFKVKT
1:750



node of

ankyrin-3, node of 
LKKNRDLE
DQDDEIE
KKEIRHV




Ranvier 

Ranvier; ankyrin 3 
INAEE (76)
KTDRRQ
EKKSHS




(ankyrin G)

isoform 1; ankyrin 

(77)
(78)






3 isoform 2; 









ankyrin 3, node of 









Ranvier (ankyrin G)









S0058
hypothetical 
80004
FLJ21918; 
ERALAAAQ
TAGMKDL
DPPRTVL
1:20



protein

hypothetical 
RCHKKVM
LSVFQAY
QAPKEWV




FLJ21918

protein FLJ21918
KER (79)
Q (80)
CL (81)






S0059
tripartite 
23650
ATDC; TRIM29; 
MEAADASR
ELHLKPH
EGEGLGQ
1:50-



motif-

tripartite motif-
SNGSSPEA
LEGAAFR
SLGNFKD
1:3000



containing 

containing 29; 
RDAR (82)
DHQ (83)
DLLN (84)




29

ataxia-









telangiectasia 









group D-associated 









protein; 









tripartite motif 









protein TRIM29 









isoform alpha;









tripartite motif 









protein TRIM29









isoform beta









S0059
tripartite 
23650
ATDC; TRIM29; 
ELHLKPHL
N/A
N/A
1:30-


P2
motif-

tripartite motif-
EGAAFRDH


1:90



containing 

containing 29; 
Q (85)






29

ataxia-









telangiectasia 









group D-associated 









protein; 









tripartite motif 









protein TRIM29 









isoform alpha;









tripartite motif 









protein TRIM29









isoform beta









S0063
iroquois 
79191
IRX3; iroquois 
GSEERGAG
KIWSLAE
KKLLKTA
1:200-



homeobox

homeobox protein 
RGSSGGRE
TATSPDNP
FQPVPRRP
1:1200



protein 3

3
E (86)
RRS (87)
QNHLD









(88)






S0068
RAS-like, 
85004
RERG; RAS-like, 
RRSSTTHV
N/A
N/A
1:500-



estrogen-

estrogen-
KQAINKML


1:40000



regulated, 

regulated,
TKISS (89)






growth-

growth-







inhibitor

inhibitor









S0070
G protein-
26996
GPCR150; GPR160; 
MRRKNTC
NETILYFP
KVQIPAYI
1:10-



coupled

putative G 
QNFMEYFC
FSSHSSYT
EMNIPLVI
1:100



receptor 

protein-coupled 
ISLAF (90)
VRSKK
LCQ (92)




160

receptor; G 

(91)







protein-coupled 









receptor 160









S0072
S100 calcium 
6279
CP-10; L1Ag; 
MLTELEKA
RDDLKKL
KMGVAA
1:6500-



binding

CALPROTECTIN; 
LNSIIDVYH
LETECPQ
HKKSHEE
1:10000



protein A8

60B8AG; S100A8; 
K (93)
YIRKKGA
SHKE (95)




(calgranulin 

MIF; CAGA; NIF; 

D (94)





A)

MRP8; MA387; 









CFAG; CGLA 









S100A8/S100A9 









COMPLEX; cystic









fibrosis antigen; 









S100 calcium-









binding protein 









A8; S100 calcium 









binding protein 









A8 (calgranulin A)









S0073
forkhead 
3169
HNF3A; MGC33105; 
PESRKDPS
HGLAPHE
EQQHKLD
1:100-



box A1

TCF3A; FOXA1; 
GASNPSAD
SQLHLKG
FKAYEQA
1:2700





forkhead box A1; 
S (96)
D (97)
LQYS (98)






HEPATOCYTE NUCLEAR 









FACTOR 3-ALPHA; 









hepatocyte nuclear 









factor 3,alpha









S0073
forkhead 
3169
HNF3A; MGC33105; 
HGLAPHES
N/A
N/A
1:50-


P2
box A1

TCF3A; FOXA1; 
QLHLKGD


1:450





forkhead box A1; 
(99)








HEPATOCYTE NUCLEAR 









FACTOR 3-ALPHA; 









hepatocyte nuclear 









factor 3, alpha









S0074
trefoil 
7033
TFF3; trefoil 
EEYVGLSA
RVDCGYP
VPWCFKP
1:2500-



factor 3

factor 3 
NQCAVPAK
HVTPKEC
LQEAECT
1:30000



(intestinal)

(intestinal); 
DRVD (100)
N (101)
F (102)






trefoil factor 3, 









HITF, human 









intestinal 









trefoil factor









S0074
trefoil 
7033
TFF3; trefoil 
VPWCFKPL
N/A
N/A
1:400-


P3
factor 3

factor 3 
QEAECTF


1:810



(intestinal)

(intestinal); 
(103)








trefoil factor 3, 









HITF, human 









intestinal 









trefoil factor









S0076
keratin 17
3872
PC2; PCHC1; 
KKEPVTTR
QDGKVISS
SSSIKGSS
1:200


x1


KRT17; K17; 
QVRTIVEE
REQVHQT
GLGGGSS






CYTOKERATIN 17; 
(104)
TR (105)
(106)






keratin 17









S0078
kynureninase 
8942
3.7.1.3; 
DEEDKLRH
KPREGEE
EERGCQL
1:180-



(L-kynurenine

XANTHURENICACIDURIA; 
FRECFYIPK
TLRIEDIL
TITFSVPN
1:200



hydrolase)

KYNU; 
IQD (107)
EVIEKE
KDVFQE






HYDROXYKYNURENINURIA; 

(108)
(109)






KYNURENINASE 









DEFICIENCY;









XANTHURENIC ACIDURIA;









kynureninase 









(L-kynurenine









hydrolase)









S0079
solute carrier  
25800
SLC39A6; LIV-1 
DHNHAASG
EEPAMEM
QRYSREE
1:200-



family 39 

protein, estrogen 
KNKRKALC
KRGPLFS
LKDAGVA
1:800



(zinc 

regulated; solute 
PDHD (110)
HLSSQNI
TL (112)




transporter),

carrier family 39 

(111)





member 6

(zinc transporter), 









member 6; solute 









carrier family 39 









(metal ion









transporter), 









member 6









S0081
N-
9
AAC1; 2.3.1.5; NAT1; 
MDIEAYLE
QMWQPLE
FNISLQRK
1:10-



acetyltransferase 

arylamine N-
RIGYKKSR
LISGKDQP
LVPKHGD
1:240



1 (arylamine N-

acetyltransferase-1; 
NKLDLE
QVPCVFR
RFFTI




acetyltransferase)

ACETYL-CoA:ARYLAMINE 
(113)
(114)
(115)






N-ACETYLTRANSFERASE;









ARYLAMINE N-









ACETYLTRANSFERASE 1; 









N-acetyltransferase 









1 (arylamine N-









acetyltransferase); 









arylamide acetylase









1 (N-









acetyltransferase 1)









S0086
X-box binding 
7494
XBP2; TREB5; XBP1; 
RQRLTHLS
EKTHGLV
QPPFLCQ
1:180-



protein 1

X-box-binding 
PEEKALRR
VENQELR
WGRHQPS
1:400





protein-1; X BOX-
KLKNR
QRLGMD
WKPLMN






BINDING PROTEIN 1; 
(116)
(117)
(118)






X BOX-BINDING 









PROTEIN 2; X-box 









binding protein 1









S0088
claudin 10
9071
CPETRL3; OSP-L; 
NKITTEFFD
FSISDNNK
EDFKTTN
1:333-





CLDN10; claudin 10; 
PLFVEQK
TPRYTYN
PSKQFDK
1:1000





claudin 10 isoform 
(119)
GAT (120)
NAYV






a; claudin 10 


(121)






isoform b









S0090
sparc/
9806
KIAA0275; testican-
EGDAKGLK
EWCFCFW
EEEGEAG
1:100-



osteonectin,

2; SPOCK2; TESTICAN 
EGETPGNF
REKPPCL
EADDGGY
1:800



cwcv and 

2; SPARC/OSTEONECTIN, 
MEDE (122)
AELER
IW (124)




kazal-like

CWCV, AND KAZAL-LIKE 

(123)





domains 

DOMAINS PROTEOGLYCAN 







proteoglycan

2; sparc/osteonectin, 







(testican) 2

cwcv and kazal-like









domains proteoglycan 









(testican) 2









S0091
lipocalin 2 
3934
UTEROCALIN; NGAL; 
DKDPQKM
KKCDYWI
ENFIRFSK
1:100



(oncogene

LCN2; NEUTROPHIL 
YATIYE
RTFVPGC
YLGLPEN




24p3)

GELATINASE-
(125)
Q (126)
(127)






ASSOCIATED 









LIPOCALIN;









ONCOGENIC 









LIPOCALIN 24P3;









lipocalin 2 









(oncogene 24p3)









S0092
paired box 
7849
PAX8; paired box 
DDSDQDSC
RQHYPEA
NTPLGRN
1:30-



gene 8

gene 8; paired box 
RLSIDSQ
YASPSHT
LSTHQTY
1:100





gene 8 isoform 
(128)
K (129)
PVVAD






PAX8C; paired box 


(130)






gene 8 isoform 









PAX8D; paired box 









gene 8 isoform 









PAX8E; paired box









gene 8 isoform 









PAX8A; paired box 









gene 8 isoform 









PAX8B; PAIRED









DOMAIN GENE 8 









PAX8/PPARG









FUSION GENE









S0093
mesothelin
10232
CAK1; SMR; MSLN; 
RLVSCPGP
KMSPEDIR
SPEELSSV
1:500





mesothelin; 
LDQDQQE
KWNVTSL
PPSSIWAV






MEGAKARYOCYTE-
(131)
ETLK (132)
RPQD (133)






POTENTIATING 









FACTOR;









SOLUBLE MPF/









MESOTHELIN-









RELATED PROTEIN; 









mesothelin isoform 









2 precursor; 









mesothelin isoform 









1 precursor; 









megakaryocyte 









potentiating factor 









precursor; ANTIGEN 









RECOGNIZED BY 









MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY









S0094
kallikrein 
5653
Bssp; PRSS18; KLK6; 
EEQNKLVH
ELIQPLPL
GKTADGD
1:150-



6 (neurosin,

Klk7; SP59; PRSS9; 
GGPCDKTS
ERDCSAN
FPDTIQC
1:300



zyme)

MGC9355; protease M; 
H (134)
T (135)
(136)






kallikrein 6 









preproprotein; 









protease, serine, 









18; protease, 









serine, 9;









kallikrein 6 









(neurosin, zyme)









S0095
Rap guanine
10411
bcm910; MGC21410;
REQWPERR
KVNSAGD
QQLKVID
1:250-



nucleotide 

9330170P05Rik; 
RCHRLENG
AIGLQPD
NQRELSR
1:1000



exchange

EPAC; RAPGEF3; 
CGNA (137)
AR (139)
LSRELE




factor (GEF) 

cAMP-GEFI; RAP 


(140)




3

guanine-









nucleotide-









exchange factor 3;









EXCHANGE PROTEIN









ACTIVATED BY cAMP; 









RAP guanine-









nucleotide-exchange 









factor (GEF) 3; 









cAMP-REGULATED









GUANINE NUCLEOTIDE









EXCHANGE FACTOR I; 









RAP GUANINE NUCLE









S0096
ATPase, H+
525
Vma2; VPP3; 
REHMQAV
KKSKAVL
DEFYSRE
1:100-



transporting,

ATP6V1B1; RTA1B; 
TRNYITHPR
DYHDDN
GRLQDLA
1:800



lysosomal 

3.6.3.14; VATB; 
(141)
(142)
PDTAL




56/58 kDa,

ATP6B1; V-ATPase 


(143)




V1 subunit B,

B1 subunit; 







isoform 1 

H+-ATPase beta 1 







(Renal 

subunit; H(+)-







tubular

transporting 







acidosis 

two-sector ATPase, 







with

58 kD subunit; 







deafness)

vacuolar proton 









pump, subunit 3; 









endomembrane 









proton pump 58 kDa









subunit; ATPase, 









H+ transporting,









lysos









S0097
frizzled 
8325
FZ-8; hFZ8; FZD8; 
KQQDGPTK
ELRVLSK
RRGGEGG
1:100-



homolog 8

frizzled 8; 
THKLEKLM
ANAIVPG
EENPSAA
1:500



(Drosophila)

frizzled homolog 
IR (144)
LSGGE
KGHLMG






8 (Drosophila); 

(145)
(146)






FRIZZLED, 










DROSOPHILA, 










HOMOLOG OF, 8









S0099
histone 
255626
HIST1H2BA; 
MPEVSSKG
GFKKAVV
KEGKKRK
1:333-



1, H2ba

histone 1, H2ba
ATISKK
KTQK
RTRKE
1:500






(147)
(148)
(149)






S0110
hypothetical 
84259
MGC2714; 
RYAFDFAR
SVFYQYL
EDGAWPV
1:500-



protein

hypothetical 
DKDQRSLD
EQSKYRV
LLDEFVE
1:2500



MGC2714

protein
ID (150)
MNKDQ
WQKVRQ






MGC2714

(151)
TS (152)






S0117
reproduction 
7993
D8S2298E; REP8; 
SFKSPQVY
RKKQQEA
EDIGITVD
1:200-



8

reproduction 8; 
LKEEEEKN
QGEKASR
TVLILEEK
1:375





Reproduction/
EKR (153)
YIE (154)
EQTN (155)






chromosome 8









S0119
slit 
6585
SLIT3; MEGF4; 
KAFRGATD
DFRCEEG
DGTSFAE
1:900



homolog 1

SLIL1; Slit-1; 
LKNLRLDK
QEEGGCL
EVEKPTK




(Drosophila)

SLIT1; slit 
NQ (156)
PRPQ (157)
CGCALCA






homolog 1 


(158)






(Drosophila); 









SLIT, DROSOPHILA, 









HOMOLOG OF, 1; 









MULTIPLE 









EPIDERMAL GROWTH 









FACTOR-LIKE 









DOMAINS 4









S0122
leucyl-tRNA
23395
6.1.1.4; MGC26121; 
QRIKEQAS
HAKTKEK
KSPQPQLL
1:150



synthetase 2,

KIAA0028; LEURS; 
KISEADKS
LEVTWEK
SNKEKAE




mitochondrial

LARS2; leucine 
KPKF (159)
MSKSKHN
ARK (161)






translase; 

(160)







leucine-tRNA 









ligase; LEUCYL-









tRNA SYNTHETASE, 









MITOCHONDRIAL; 









leucyl-tRNA 









synthetase 2,









mitochondrial; 









leucyl-tRNA 









synthetase 2, 









mitochondrial 









precursor









S0123
homeo box D4
3233
HOX4B; HOXD4; 
MLFEQGQQ
KDQKAKG
HSSQGRL
1:100-





HHO.C13; HOX-5.1; 
ALELPECT
ILHSPASQ
PEAPKLT
1:500





HOMEOBOX D4; 
(162)
SPERS
HL (164)






HOMEOBOX 4B; 

(163)







HOMEOBOX X; homeo 









box D4; homeobox 









protein Hox-D4; 









Hox-4.2, mouse, 









homolog of homeo 









box X









S0124
sphingosine-1-
8879
KIAA1252; SPL; 
KRGARRGG
KIVRVPLT
QFLKDIRE
1:990-



phosphate 

SGPL1; 
WKRKMPS
KMMEVD
SVTQIMK
1:1500



lyase 1

sphingosine-1-
TDL (165)
VR (166)
NPKA






phosphate lyase 1


(167)






S0126
HBxAg 
55789
XTP1; HBxAg 
SKQGVVIL
VQTFSRCI
LKKPFQPF
1:450-



transactivated

transactivated 
DDKSKELP
LCSKDEV
QRTRSFR
1:1600



protein 1

protein 1
HW (168)
DLDEL
M (170)








(169)







S0132
SRY (sex 
6662
SRA1; CMD1; CMPD1; 
MNLLDPFM
NTFPKGEP
KNGQAEA
1:100-



determining

SOX9; SRY-BOX 9; 
KMTDEQEK
DLKKESE
EEATEQT
1:500



region Y)-

transcription 
GLS (171)
EDK (172)
HISPN




box 9

factor SOX9; SRY-


(173)




(campomelic

RELATED HMG-BOX 







dysplasia, 

GENE 9; SEX 







autosomal

REVERSAL, 







sex-reversal)

AUTOSOMAL, 1; SRY 









(sex-determining 









region Y)-box 9 









protein; SRY (sex-









determining region 









Y)-box 9 









(campomelic









dysplasia, 









autosomal sex-









reversal); SRY (









S0137
cadherin, EGF 
1952
Flamingo1; CELSR2; 
QASSLRLEP
ELKGFAE
RSGKSQPS
1:1800-



LAG seven-pass 

EGFL2; KIAA0279; 
GRANDGD
RLQRNES
YIPFLLRE
1:5000



G-type 

MEGF3; CDHF10; 
WH (174)
GLDSGR
E (176)




receptor 2 

EGF-like-domain, 

(175)





(flamingo

multiple 2; 







homolog, 

epidermal growth 








Drosophila)


factor-like 2; 









multiple epidermal









growth factor-like 









domains 3; cadherin 









EGF LAG seven-pass 









G-type receptor 2; 









cadherin, EGF LAG









seven-pass G-type 









receptor 2









S0139
gamma-
8836
3.4.19.9; GGH; 
RRSDYAKV
KNFTMNE
EFFVNEA
1:2500-



glutamyl

gamma-glutamyl 
AKIFYNLSI
KLKKFFN
RKNNHHF
1:30000



hydrolase 

hydrolase 
QSFDD
VLTTN
KSESEE




(conjugase,

precursor; 
(177)
(178)
(179)




folylpoly-

gamma-glutamyl 







gammaglutamyl

hydrolase 







hydrolase)

(conjugase, 









folylpolygammaglutamyl 









hydrolase)









S0140
bullous 
667
BP240; FLJ13425; 
KNTQAAEA
QENQPEN
KQMEKDL
1:250-



pemphigoid

FLJ32235; FLJ21489; 
LVKLYETK
SKTLATQ
AFQKQVA
1:20000



antigen 1,

FLJ30627; CATX-15; 
LCE (180)
LNQ (181)
EKQLK




230/240 kDa

KIAA0728; BPAG1; 


(182)






dystonin; 









hemidesmosomal plaque 









protein; bullous 









pemphigoid antigen 1,









230/240 kDa; bullous 









pemphigoid antigen 1 









(230/240 kD); bullous









pemphigoid antigen 1 









isoform 1eA precursor; 









bulb









S0143
fatty acid 
2194
2.3.1.85; OA-519; 
EFVEQLRK
DRHPQAL
REVRQLT
1:5000-



synthase

FASN; MGC14367; 
EGVFAKEV
EAAQAEL
LRKLQEL
1:30000





MGC15706; fatty 
R (183)
QQHD
SSKADE






acid synthase

(184)
(185)






S0143
fatty acid 
2194
2.3.1.85; OA-519; 
REVRQLTL
N/A
N/A
1:200-


P3
synthase

FASN; MGC14367; 
RKLQELSS


1:630





MGC15706; fatty 
KADE (186)








acid synthase









S0144
matrix
4323
MMP-X1; 3.4.24.-; 
AYIREGHE
DEASLEP
RGSFMGS
1:500-



metalloproteinase 

MMP14; MTMMP1; 
KQADIMIFF
GYPKHIK
DEVFTYF
1:20000



14 (membrane-

MT1-MMP; 
AE (187)
ELGR (188)
YK (189)




inserted)

membrane-type-1 









matrix 









metalloproteinase; 









matrix 









metalloproteinase 









14 preproprotein; 









MATRIX 









METALLOPROTEINASE 









14, MEMBRANE-TYPE; 









matrix 









metalloproteinase 









14 (membrane-









inserted); 









membrane-type 









matrix









metalloprotein









S0147
cystatin A 
1475
STF1; CSTA; STFA; 
MIPGGLSE
NETYGKL
DLVLTGY
1:100-



(stefin A)

cystatin AS; 
AKPATPEIQ
EAVQYKT
QVDKNKD
1:5000





cystatin A 
EIV (190)
Q (191)
DELTGF






(stefin A)


(192)






S0149
transient 
55503
TRPV6; ECAC2; 
RQEHCMSE
QGHKWG
RACGKRV
1:400-



receptor

CAT1; CATL; 
HFKNRPAC
ESPSQGTQ
SEGDRNG
1:20000



potential 

CALCIUM TRANSPORTER 
LGAR (193)
AGAGK
SGGGKW




cation

1; CALCIUM 

(194)
G (195)




channel, 

TRANSPORTER-LIKE 







subfamily V,

PROTEIN; EPITHELIAL 







member 6

CALCIUM CHANNEL 2;









transient receptor









potential cation 









channel, subfamily 









V, member 6









S0156
fatty acid 
2173
B-FABP; FABP7; 
MVEAFCAT
QVGNVTK
KVVIRTLS
1:100-



binding

FABPB; MRG; 
WKLTNSQN
PTVIISQE
TFKNTE
1:20000



protein 7, 

mammary-derived 
(196)
(197)
(198)




brain

growth inhibitor-









related; FATTY 









ACID-BINDING









PROTEIN 7; FATTY 









ACID-BINDING 









PROTEIN, BRAIN; 









fatty acid binding 









protein 7, brain









S0158
cadherin 3, 
1001
CDHP; HJMD; PCAD; 
RAVFREAE
QEPALFST
QKYEAHV
1:150-



type 1, P-

CDH3; placental 
VTLEAGGA
DNDDFTV
PENAVGH
1:2000



cadherin 

cadherin; CADHERIN, 
EQE (199)
RN (200)
E (201)




(placental)

PLACENTAL; cadherin 









3, P-cadherin 









(placental); 









calcium-dependent









adhesion protein, 









placental; cadherin 









3, type 1 









preproprotein; 









cadherin 3, type 1, 









P-cadherin 









(placental)









S0165
chemokine 
2919
MGSA-a; NAP-3; 
KKIIEKML
N/A
N/A
1:100-



(C—X—C motif) 

CXCL1; SCYB1; GROa; 
NSDKSN


1:500



ligand 1 

GRO1, FORMERLY; GRO 
(202)






(melanoma 

PROTEIN, ALPHA; GRO1 







growth 

ONCOGENE, FORMERLY; 







stimulating 

MELANOMA GROWTH







activity, 

STIMULATORY ACTIVITY,







alpha)

ALPHA; GRO1 oncogene 









(melanoma growth-









stimulating 









activity); CHEMOKINE, 









CXC MOTIF, LIGAND 1; 









GRO1 oncogene 









(melanoma grow









S0171
baculoviral 
null
BIRC5; baculoviral 
GKPGNQNS
QAEAPLV
NCFLTER
1:22500-



IAP repeat-

IAP repeat-
KNEPPKKR
PLSRQNK
KAQPDE
1:30000



containing 5

containing 5 
ERER (203)
(204)
(205)




(survivin)

(survivin)









S0193
procollagen-
5352
PLOD2; LYSYL 
EFDTVDLS
NKEVYHE
KQVDLEN
1:20000



lysine, 2-

HYDROXYLASE 2; 
AVDVHPN
KDIKVFFD
VWLDFIR




oxoglutarate 

LYSINE HYDROXYLASE 
(206)
KAK (207)
E (208)




5-dioxygenase 

2; PROCOLLAGEN-







(lysine 

LYSINE, 2-







hydroxylase) 

OXOGLUTARATE 5-







2

DIOXYGENASE 2; 









procollagen-









lysine, 2-









oxoglutarate 5-









dioxygenase (lysine 









hydroxylase) 2; 









procollagen-lysine, 









2-oxoglutarate 5-









dioxygenase (lysine 









hydroxylase) 2 









isoform









S0202
PTK7 protein 
5754
PTK7; CCK4; 
LKKPQDSQ
KAKRLQK
KDRPSFSE
1:500-



tyrosine

protein-tyrosine 
LEEGKPGY
QPEGEEPE
IASALGDS
1:800



kinase 7

kinase PTK7; colon 
LD (209)
ME (210)
TVDSKP






carcinoma kinase-4; 


(211)






PTK7 protein 









tyrosine kinase 7; 









PTK7 protein 









tyrosine kinase 7 









isoform e precursor; 









PTK7 protein 









tyrosine kinase 7 









isoform a precursor; 









PTK7 protein 









tyrosine kinase 7 









isoform d precursor;









S0211
cytochrome 
1549
CYPIIA7; P450-IIA4; 
KRGIEERIQ
DRVIGKN
NPQHFLD
1:500-



P450,

1.14.14.1; CPA7; 
EESGFLIE
RQPKFED
DKGQFKK
1:2500



family 2, 

CYP2A7; CPAD; 
(212)
RTK (213)
SD (214)




subfamily A,

CYTOCHROME P450, 







polypeptide 

SUBFAMILY IIA, 







7

POLYPEPTIDE 7; 









cytochrome P450, 









subfamily IIA 









(phenobarbital-









inducible), 









polypeptide 7; 









cytochrome P450, 









family 2, subfamily 









A, polypeptide 7; 









cytochrome P450,









family 2, su









S0218
solute carrier 
222962
SLC29A4; solute 
RHCILGEW
KQRELAG
RNAHGSC
1:20-



family 29 

carrier family 29 
LPILIMAVF
NTMTVSY
LHASTAN
1:50



(nucleoside

(nucleoside 
N (215)
MS (216)
GSILAGL




transporters),

transporters), 


(217)




member 4

member 4









S0221
solute carrier 
9153
HCNT2; SLC28A2; 
ELMEKEVE
KARSFCK
KNKRLSG
1:500-



family 28 

HsT17153; SPNT1; 
PEGSKRTD
THARLFK
MEEWIEG
1:1200



(sodium-coupled 

CONCENTRATIVE 
(218)
K (219)
EK (220)




nucleoside 

NUCLEOSIDE 







transporter), 

TRANSPORTER 2; 







member 2

SODIUM-DEPENDENT 









PURINE NUCLEOSIDE 









TRANSPORTER 1;









solute carrier 









family 28 (sodium-









coupled nucleoside 









transporter), 









member 2









S0223
angiopoietin-
51129
HFARP; FIAF; 
EGSTDLPL
KVAQQQR
DHKHLDH
1:30-



like 4

ANGPTL4; PGAR; 
APESRVDP
HLEKQHL
EVAKPAR
1:10000





angiopoietin-like 
E (221)
R (222)
RKRLPE






4; FASTING-INDUCED 


(223)






ADIPOSE FACTOR; 









PPARG ANGIOPOIETIN-









RELATED PROTEIN; 









HEPATIC FIBRINOGEN/









ANGIOPOIETIN-









RELATED PROTEIN









S0235
carcinoembryonic
1048
CEACAM5; CD66e;
KLTIESTPF
KSDLVNE
KPVEDKD
1:500-



antigen-related 

carcinoembryonic 
NVAEGKEC
EATGQFR
AVAFTCE
1:4500



cell adhesion 

antigen-related 
(224)
VYPELPK
PEAQ (226)




molecule 5

cell adhesion 

(225)







molecule 5









S0237
podocalyxin-
5420
podocalyxin-like; 
DEKLISLIC
KDKWDEL
DSWIVPL
1:1000-



like

Gp200; PCLP; PODXL; 
RAVKATFN
KEAGVSD
DNLTKDD
1:2000





PODOCALYXIN-LIKE 
PAQDK
MKLGD
LDEEEDT






PROTEIN; 
(227)
(228)
HL (229)






podocalyxin-like 









precursor









S0238
xenotropic and
9213
X3; XPR1; X  
EAVVTNEL
RRYRDTK
KARDTKV
1:100-



polytropic 

RECEPTOR; SYG1, 
EDGDRQKA
RAFPHLV
LIEDTDDE
1:500



retrovirus

YEAST, HOMOLOG OF; 
MKRLR
NAGK
ANT (232)




receptor

xenotropic and 
(230)
(231)







polytropic 









retrovirus 









receptor









S0241
glycyl-tRNA
2617
GlyRS; GARS; CMT2D; 
RKRVLEAK
RHGVSHK
EARYPLFE
1:500-



synthetase

6.1.1.14; SMAD1; 
ELALQPKD
VDDSSGSI
GQETGKK
1:7500





GLYCYL-tRNA 
DIVD (233)
GRRYAR
ETIEE






SYNTHETASE; glycine 

(234)
(235)






tRNA ligase; 









Charcot-Marie-Tooth 









neuropathy,









neuronal type, D









S0244
dachshund 
1602
DACH1; FLJ10138; 
DLAGHDM
EKQVQLE
EADRSGG
1:100-



homolog 1

dachshund homolog 
GHESKRMH
KTELKMD
RTDAERTI
1:3000



(Drosophila)

(Drosophila); 
IEKDE (236)
FLRERE
QDGR






DACHSHUND, 

(237)
(238)







DROSOPHILA, HOMOLOG 










OF; dachshund 









homolog 1 









(Drosophila); 









dachshund homolog 1









isoform a; dachshund 









homolog 1 isoform b; 









dachshund homolog 1 









isoform c









S0251
transcription 
29841
TFCP2L2; LBP-32; MGR; 
EALYPQRR
DYYKVPR
DKYDVPH
1:5400



factor

GRHL1; mammalian 
SYTSEDEA
ERRSSTA
DKIGKIFK




CP2-like 2

grainyhead; LBP 
WK (239)
KPEVE
KCKK






protein 32; 

(240)
(241)






transcription factor 









CP2-like 2; leader-









binding protein 32 









isoform 2; leader-









binding protein 32 









isoform 1









S0253
lysosomal 
55353
LAPTM4B; lysosomal 
DPDQYNFS
EYIRQLPP
DTTVLLPP
1:500-



associated 

associated protein 
SSELGGDF
NFPYRDD
YDDATVN
1:2000



protein 

transmembrane 4 
EFMDD
(243)
GAAKE




transmembrane 

beta
(242)

(244)




4 beta











S0255
cyclin E2
9134
CYCE2; CCNE2; 
RREEVTKK
KESRYVH
DFFDRFM
1:1000-





cyclin E2; G1/S-
HQYEIR
DKHFEVL
LTQKDIN
1:2000





specific cyclin E2; 
(245)
HSDLE
K (247)






cyclin E2 isoform 2; 

(246)







cyclin E2 isoform 3; 









cyclin E2 isoform 1









S0260
nicastrin
23385
KIAA0253; nicastrin; 
ESKHFTRD
ETDRLPR
ESRWKDI
1:2400-





NCSTN; APH2; 
LMEKLKGR
CVRSTAR
RARIFLIA
1:5400





ANTERIOR PHARYNX 
TSR (248)
LAR (249)
SKELE






DEFECTIVE 2, C. 


(250)







ELEGANS, HOMOLOG OF










S0265
FXYD domain
5349
MAT-8; MAT8; PLML; 
KVTLGLLV
SEWRSSG
KCKCKFG
1:400-



containing 

FXYD3; 
FLAGFPVL
EQAGR
QKSGHHP
1:1200



ion 

phospholemman-like 
DANDLED
(252)
GE (253)




transport 

protein; MAMMARY 
(251)






regulator 3

TUMOR, 8-KD; FXYD 









domain-containing 









ion transport









regulator 3; FXYD 









domain containing









ion transport 









regulator 3; FXYD









domain containing 









ion transport









regulator 3 









isoform 2 









precursor; FXYD 









domai









S0267
immunoglobulin
3321
EWI-3; V8; IGSF3; 
KVAKESDS
EREKTVT
KRAEDTA
1:200-



superfamily, 

immunoglobin s
VFVLKIYH
GEFIDKES
GQTALTV
1:250



member 3

uperfamily, member 
LRQED
KRPK (255)
MRPD






3; immunoglobulin 
(254)

(256)






superfamily, member 









3









S0270
signal 
10254
STAM2B; STAM2; 
KVARKVR
ETEVAAV
EIKKSEPE
1:1000-



transducing

DKFZp564C047; Hbp; 
ALYDFEAV
DKLNVID
PVYIDED
1:9000



adaptor 

STAM2A; SIGNAL-
EDNE (257)
DDVE
KMDR




molecule

TRANSDUCING ADAPTOR 

(258)
(259)




(SH3 domain 

MOLECULE 2; signal 







and ITAM 

transducing adaptor 







motif) 2

molecule 2; STAM- 









like protein  









containing SH3 and  









ITAM domains 2; 









signal transducing 









adaptor molecule 









(SH3 domain and 









ITAM motif) 2









S0273
dickkopf 
22943
DKK1; DKK-1; SK; 
DEECGTDE
RGEIEETI
N/A
1:400-



homolog 1

dickkopf-1 like; 
YCASPTRG
TESFGND

1:500



(Xenopus 

dickkopf (Xenopus 
GD (260)
HSTLD






laevis)



laevis) homolog 1; 


(261)







dickkopf homolog 1 









(Xenopus laevis); 









DICKKOPF, XENOPUS, 









HOMOLOG OF, 1









S0280
solute carrier 
65010
SLC26A6; solute 
MDLRRRD
DTDIYRD
EFYSDAL
1:1800-



family 26, 

carrier family 
YHMERPLL
VAEYSEA
KQRCGVD
1:2400



member 6

26, member 6
NQEHLEE
KE (263)
VDFLISQK







(262)

KK (264)






S0286
WNT  
11197
WIF1; WIF-1; WNT 
DAHQARVL
ERRICECP
KRYEASLI
1:90



inhibitory

inhibitory factor 
IGFEEDILIV
DGFHGPH
HALRPAG




factor 1

1; Wnt inhibitory 
SE (265)
CEK (266)
AQLR






factor-1 precursor


(267)






S0288
preferentially
23532
MAPE; PRAME; OPA-
KRKVDGLS
KEGACDE
DIKMILK
1:1200



expressed 

INTERACTING 
TEAEQPFIP
LFSYLIEK
MVQLDSI




antigen in

PROTEIN 4; Opa-
VE (268)
VKRKK
EDLE (270)




melanoma

interacting 

(269)







protein OIP4; 









preferentially 









expressed antigen 









in melanoma; 









melanoma antigen 









preferentially









expressed in 









tumors









S0295
prostaglandin 
9536
PGES; TP53I12; 
RLRKKAFA
RSDPDVE
RVAHTVA
1:100-



E synthase

MGST1L1; PP1294; 
NPEDALR
RCLRAHR
YLGKLRA
1:2400





PP102; PTGES; 
(271)
ND (272)
PIR (273)






MGC10317; PIG12; 









MGST1-L1; MGST-IV; 









MGST1-like 1; 









p53-INDUCED GENE 









12; prostaglandin 









E synthase; p53-









induced apoptosis 









protein 12; 









prostaglandin E









synthase isoform 









2; prostaglandin 









E synthase 









isoform 1; micros









S0296
solute carrier 
8140
SLC7A5; MPE16; 
KRRALAAP
EAREKML
MIWLRHR
1:300-



family 7 

D16S469E; CD98; 
AAEEKEEA
AAKSADG
KPELERPI
1:5000



(cationic amino 

LAT1; 4F2 light 
R (274)
SAPAGE
K (276)




acid 

chain; Membrane 

(275)





transporter, 

protein E16; L-







y+ system), 

TYPE AMINO ACID 







member 5

TRANSPORTER 1; 









Solute carrier 









family 7, member 









5; solute 









carrier family 7 









(cationic amino 









acid transporter, 









y+ system), 









member 5









S0296
solute carrier 
8140
SLC7A5; MPE16; 
KRRALAAP
N/A
N/A
1:225-


P1
family 7 

D16S469E; CD98; 
AAEEKEEA


1:3150



(cationic amino 

LAT1; 4F2 light 
R (277)






acid 

chain; Membrane 







transporter, 

protein E16; L-







y+ system), 

TYPE AMINO ACID 







member 5

TRANSPORTER 1; 









Solute carrier









family 7, member 









5; solute 









carrier family 7









(cationic amino 









acid transporter, 









y+ system), 









member 5









S0297
v-maf
7975
FLJ32205; NFE2U; 
KPNKALKV
KRVTQKE
RLELDAL
1:333-



musculoaponeurotic

MAFK; NFE2, 18-KD 
KKEAGE
ELERQRV
RSKYE
1:800



fibrosarcoma

SUBUNIT; nuclear 
(278)
ELQQEVE
(280)




oncogene homolog 

factor erythroid-

K (279)





K (avian)

2, ubiquitous 









(p18); NUCLEAR 









FACTOR ERYTHROID 









2, UBIQUITOUS 









SUBUNIT; v-maf









musculoaponeurotic 









fibrosarcoma 









oncogene homolog K 









(avian); v-maf 









avian 









musculoaponeurotic 









fibrosarcoma 









oncogen









S0301
signal peptide, 
57758
SCUBE2; signal 
KMHTDGRS
KKGFKLL
KRTEKRL
1:3500-



CUB domain, 

peptide, CUB 
CLEREDTV
TDEKSCQ
RKAIRTLR
1:5400



EGF-like 2

domain, EGF-like 2
LEVTE (281)
DVDE
KAVHRE








(282)
(283)






S0303
gamma-
2564
GABRE; GABA-A 
RVEGPQTE
EETKSTET
KWENFKL
1:300-



aminobutyric

RECEPTOR, EPSILON 
SKNEASSR
ETGSRVG
EINEKNS
1:500



acid (GABA) A

POLYPEPTIDE;
D (284)
KLPE (285)
WKLFQFD




receptor, 

GAMMA-AMINOBUTYRIC 


(286)




epsilon

ACID RECEPTOR, 









EPSILON; gamma-









aminobutyric acid 









(GABA) A receptor,









epsilon; gamma-









aminobutyric acid









(GABA) A receptor, 









epsilon isoform 2;









gamma-aminobutyric 









acid (GABA) A 









receptor, epsilon 









is









S0305
S100 calcium 
6281
CAL1L; GP11; p10; 
DKGYLTKE
KDPLAVD
N/A
1:8332-



binding 

42C; S100A10; 
DLRVLMEK
KIMKDLD

1:24996



protein A10 

ANX2LG; CLP11; 
E (287)
QCRDGK





(annexin II 

Ca[1]; CALPACTIN  

(288)





ligand, 

I, p11 SUBUNIT; 







calpactin I, 

ANNEXIN II, LIGHT 







light 

CHAIN; CALPACTIN 







polypeptide 

I, LIGHT CHAIN; 







(p11))

S100 calcium-









binding protein 









A10 (annexin









II ligand, 









calpactin I, 









light polypeptide









(p11)); S100 









calcium binding 









protein A10









S0311
v-myb 
4605
MYBL2; MGC15600; 
MSRRTRCE
EEDLKEV
RRSPIKKV
1:750-



myeloblastosis

MYB-RELATED GENE 
DLDELHYQ
LRSEAGIE
RKSLALDI
1:5000



viral oncogene

BMYB; MYB-related 
DTDSD
LIIEDDIR
VDED




homolog 

protein B; v-myb 
(289)
(290)
(291)




(avian)-like

myeloblastosis 







2

viral oncogene









homolog (avian)-









like 2; V-MYB 









AVIAN 









MYELOBLASTOSIS 









VIRAL ONCOGENE 









HOMOLOG-LIKE 2









S0312
nucleoside
4860
NP; 2.4.2.1; 
EDYKNTAE
DERFGDR
KVIMDYE
1:1000-



phosphorylase

nucleoside 
WLLSHTKH
FPAMSDA
SLEKANH
1:3600





phosphorylase; 
R (292)
YDRTMRQ
EE (294)






PURINE-

R (293)







NUCLEOSIDE:









ORTHOPHOSPHATE 









RIBOSYLTRANSFERASE; 









purine nucleoside 









phosphorylase; PNP









NUCLEOSIDE 









PHOSPHORYLASE 









DEFICIENCY; ATAXIA 









WITH DEFICIENT 









CELLULAR IMMUNITY









S0314
chaperonin 
22948
KIAA0098; CCT5; 
DQDRKSRL
KGVIVDK
RMILKIDD
1:6000-



containing 

chaperonin 
MGLEALKS
DFSHPQM
IRKPGESE
1:30000



TCP1, 

containing TCP1, 
HIMAAK
PKKVED
E (297)




subunit 5 

subunit 5 
(295)
(296)





(epsilon)

(epsilon)









S0315
non-
4830
GAAD; NME1; NDPKA; 
RLQPEFKP
KFMQASE
DSVESAE
1:9000-



metastatic 

2.7.4.6; NM23-H1; 
KQLEGTMA
DLLKEHY
KEIGLWF
1:18000



cells 1,

AWD NM23H1B; GZMA-
NCER (298)
VDLKDR
HPEELVD




protein 

ACTIVATED DNase; 

(299)
(300)




(NM23A)

NUCLEOSIDE 







expressed 

DIPHOSPHATE 







in

KINASE-A; AWD, 










DROSOPHILA, HOMOLOG 










OF; METASTASIS 









INHIBITION FACTOR 









NM23; nucleoside-









diphosphate kinase 









1 isoform b;









NONMETASTATIC 









PROTEIN 23,  









HOMOLOG 1; nucleo









S0316
squalene 
6713
SQLE; 1.14.99.7; 
KSPPESENK
RDGRKVT
DHLKEPF
1:1000-



epoxidase

squalene epoxidase; 
EQLEARRR
VIERDLKE
LEATDNS
1:10000





squalene 
R (301)
PDR (302)
HLR (303)






monooxygenase









S0319
pregnancy-
29948
OKL38; pregnancy-
DLEVKDW
EYHKVHQ
RHQLLCF
1:900



induced 

induced growth 
MQKKRRG
MMREQSI
KEDCQAV




growth 

inhibitor; 
LRNSR (304)
LSPSPYEG
FQDLEGV




inhibitor

PREGNANCY-INDUCED 

YR (305)
EK (306)






GROWTH INHIBITOR 









OKL38









S0326
mal, T-cell
114569
MAL2; mal, T-cell 
GPDILRTYS
CSLGLAL
N/A
1:120-



differentiation 

differentiation
GAFVCLE
RRWRP

1:1200



protein 2

protein 2
(307)
(308)







S0330
aldo-keto 
1645
1.1.1.213; 2-
RYLTLDIFA
N/A
N/A
1:2500-



reductase 

ALPHA-HSD; 
GPPNYPFS


1:75000



family 1, 

1.3.1.20; 20-
DEY (309)






member C1/2 

ALPHA-HSD; MGC8954; 







(dihydrodiol 

H-37; HAKRC; MBAB; 







dehydrogenase 

C9; DDH1; AKR1C1; 







1; 20-alpha 

trans-1,2-







(3-alpha)-

dihydrobenzene-







hydroxysteroid 

1,2-diol 







dehydrogenase)

dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase homolog; 









aldo-keto 









reductase C; 20 









alpha-









hydroxysteroid 









dehydrogenase; 









hepatic 









dihydrodiol









S0330-
aldo-keto 
1645
1.1.1.213; 2-
RYLTLDIFA
N/A
N/A
1:600


x1
reductase 

ALPHA-HSD; 
GPPNYPFS






family 1, 

1.3.1.20; 20-
DEY (310)






member C1/2 

ALPHA-HSD; MGC8954; 







(dihydrodiol 

H-37; HAKRC; MBAB; 







dehydrogenase 

C9; DDH1; AKR1C1; 







1; 20-alpha 

trans-1,2-







(3-alpha)-

dihydrobenzene-







hydroxysteroid 

1,2-diol 







dehydrogenase)

dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase homolog; 









aldo-keto 









reductase C; 20 









alpha-









hydroxysteroid 









dehydrogenase; 









hepatic 









dihydrodiol









S0331
aldo-keto 
8644
HA1753; 1.1.1.188; 
HYFNSDSF
N/A
N/A
1:300-



reductase 

DD3; hluPGFS; 
ASHPNYPY


1:999



family 1, 

HSD17B5; 1.3.1.20; 
SDEY (311)






member C3 

1.1.1.213; AKR1C3; 







(3-alpha 

KIAA0119; HAKRB; 







hydroxysteroid 

HAKRe; trans-1,2-







dehydrogenase, 

dihydrobenzene-







type II)

1,2-diol 









dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase homolog; 









dihydrodiol









dehydrogenase 3; 









prostaglandin F









synthase; ALDO-









KETO REDUCTASE 









B; 3-









S0331-
aldo-keto 
8644
HA1753; 1.1.1.188; 
HYFNSDSF
N/A
N/A
1:150-


x1
reductase 

DD3; hluPGFS; 
ASHPNYPY


1:300



family 1, 

HSD17B5; 1.3.1.20; 
SDEY (312)






member C3 

1.1.1.213; AKR1C3; 







(3-alpha 

KIAA0119; HAKRB; 







hydroxysteroid 

HAKRe; trans-1,2-







dehydrogenase, 

dihydrobenzene-







type II)

1,2-diol 









dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase homolog; 









dihydrodiol









dehydrogenase 3; 









prostaglandin F









synthase; ALDO-









KETO REDUCTASE B; 









3-









S0332
aldo-keto 
1645
1.1.1.213; 2-
RYVVMDFL
N/A
N/A
1:300-



reductase 

ALPHA-HSD; 
MDHPDYPF


1:400



family 1, 

1.3.1.20; 20-
SDEY (313)






member C4 

ALPHA-HSD; 







(dihydrodiol 

MGC8954; H-37; 







dehydrogenase 

HAKRC; MBAB; C9; 







1; 20-alpha 

DDH1; AKR1C1; 







(3-alpha)-

trans-1,2-







hydroxysteroid 

dihydrobenzene-







dehydrogenase)

1,2-diol 









dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase 









homolog; aldo-









keto reductase 









C; 20 alpha-









hydroxysteroid









dehydrogenase; 









hepatic 









dihydrodiol









S0332-
aldo-keto 
1645
1.1.1.213; 2-
RYVVMDFL
N/A
N/A
1:75-


x1
reductase 

ALPHA-HSD; 
MDHPDYPF


1:150



family 1, 

1.3.1.20; 20-
SDEY (314)






member C4 

ALPHA-HSD; 







(dihydrodiol 

MGC8954; H-37; 







dehydrogenase 

HAKRC; MBAB; 







1; 20-alpha 

C9; DDH1; 







(3-alpha)-

AKR1C1; trans-







hydroxysteroid 

1,2-







dehydrogenase)

dihydrobenzene-









1,2-diol 









dehydrogenase; 









chlordecone 









reductase 









homolog; aldo-









keto reductase 









C; 20 alpha-









hydroxysteroid 









dehydrogenase; 









hepatic 









dihydrodiol









S0336
chromosome 20 
140809
C20orf139; 
DPAKVQSL
RETIPAKL
N/A
1:1600-



open reading 

chromosome 20 
VDTIREDP
VQSTLSD

1:2400



frame 139

open reading 
D (315)
LR (316)







frame 139









S0342
solute carrier 
154091
SLC2A12; solute 
SDTTEELT
N/A
N/A
1:400-



family 2 

carrier family 2 
VIKSSLKDE


1:1250



(facilitated 

(facilitated 
(317)






glucose 

glucose 







transporter), 

transporter), 







member 12

member 12









S0343
solute carrier 
154091
SLC2A12; solute 
HSRSSLMP
N/A
N/A
1:50-



family 2 

carrier family 2 
LRNDVDKR


1:125



(facilitated 

(facilitated 
(318)






glucose 

glucose 







transporter), 

transporter), 







member 12

member 12









S0357
HTPAP 
84513
HTPAP; HTPAP 
YRNPYVEA
N/A
N/A
1:100-



protein

protein
EYFPTKPM


1:300






FVIA (319)








S0364
KIAA0746 
23231
KIAA0746; 
KKFPRFRN
N/A
N/A
1:200-



protein

KIAA0746 protein
RELEATRR


1:300






QRMD (320)








S0367
peroxisomal 
122970
PTE2B; 
SGNTAINY
N/A
N/A
1:200-



acyl-CoA

peroxisomal 
KHSSIP


1:600



thioesterase 

acyl-CoA
(321)






2B

thioesterase 









2B









S0374
chloride 
53405
CLIC5; 
DANTCGED
N/A
N/A
1:5000-



intracellular

chloride 
KGSRRKFL


1:9000



channel 5

intracellular 
DGDE (322)








channel 5









S0380
keratinocyte
200634
KRTCAP3; 
QLEEMTEL
N/A
N/A
1:2000-



associated 

keratinocyte 
ESPKCKRQ


1:9000



protein 3

associated 
ENEQ (323)








protein 3









S0384
FERM, RhoGEF
10160
p63RhoGEF; CDEP; 
QADGAASA
N/A
N/A
1:100



(ARHGEF) and

FARP1; 
PTEEEEEV






pleckstrin 

chondrocyte-
VKDR (324)






domain 

derived ezrin-







protein 1

like protein; 







(chondrocyte-

FERM, RhoGEF, 







derived)

and pleckstrin 









domain protein 









1; FERM, ARHGEF, 









AND PLECKSTRIN 









DOMAIN-CONTAINING 









PROTEIN 1; FERM,









RhoGEF (ARHGEF) 









and pleckstrin 









domain protein 1 









(chondrocyte-









derived)









S0388
trichorhino-
7227
GC79; TRPS1; 
SGDSLETK
N/A
N/A
1:600



phalangeal

TRPS1 GENE; 
EDQKMSPK






syndrome I

trichorhinophalangeal 
ATEE (325)








syndrome I; zinc 









finger transcription 









factor TRPS1









S0396
cytochrome 
1576
1.14.14.1; HLP; 
RKSVKRM
N/A
N/A
1:15



P450, family 

CYP3A3; CYP3A4; 
KESRLEDT






3, subfamily 

P450C3; NF-25; CP33; 
QKHRV






A, 

CP34; P450-III, 
(326)






polypeptide 

STEROID-INDUCIBLE; 







4

nifedipine oxidase; 









glucocorticoid-









inducible P450; 









CYTOCHROME P450PCN1; 









P450, FAMILY III; 









P450-III, steroid 









inducible; cytochrome









P450, subfamily IIIA,









polypeptide 4;









S0398
FAT tumor 
2195
CDHF7; FAT; cadherin 
KIRLPEREK
N/A
N/A
1:45-



suppressor

ME5; FAT tumor 
PDRERNAR


1:200



homolog 1

suppressor precursor; 
REP (327)






(Drosophila)

cadherin-related 









tumor suppressor 









homolog precursor; 









cadherin family member 









7 precursor; homolog 









of Drosophila Fat 









protein precursor; 









FAT tumor suppressor 









homolog 1 









(Drosophila); FAT 









TUMOR SUPPRESS









S0401
granulin
2896
ACROGRANIN; 
RGTKCLRR
N/A
N/A
1:600-





PROEPITHELIN; 
EAPRWDAP


1:3000





PROGRANULIN; PEPI; 
LRDP (328)








PCDGF; granulin; GRN; 









EPITHELIN PRECURSOR









S0404
N-myc 
10397
HMSNL; TARG1; CMT4D; 
GTRSRSHT
N/A
N/A
1:100-



downstream

RTP; PROXY1; NDRG1; 
SEGTRSRS


1:900



regulated 

GC4; NMSL; TDDS; 
HTSE (329)






gene 1

RIT42; NDR1; 









differentiation-









related gene 1 









protein; nickel-









specific induction 









protein Cap43; 









protein regulated 









by oxygen-1; NMYC









DOWNSTREAM-REGULATED









GENE 1; reducing 









agents and 









tunicamycin-respon









S0411
fatty acid 
2171
PAFABP; EFABP; E-
EETTADGR
N/A
N/A
1:1800



binding 

FABP; FABP5; PA-
KTQTVCNF






protein 5 

FABP; FATTY ACID-
TD (330)






(psoriasis-

BINDING PROTEIN, 







associated)

EPIDERMAL; FATTY 









ACID-BINDING 









PROTEIN 5; FATTY 









ACID-BINDING 









PROTEIN,









PSORIASIS-









ASSOCIATED; fatty









acid binding 









protein 5 









(psoriasis-









associated)









S0413
cyclin-
1028
WBS; p57(KIP2); 
AKRKRSAP
N/A
N/A
1:2700



dependent

BWCR; CDKN1C; BWS; 
EKSSGDVP






kinase 

Beckwith-Wiedemann 
(331)






inhibitor 

syndrome; cyclin-







1C (p57, 

dependent kinase







Kip2)

inhibitor 1C (p57, 









Kip2)









S0414
alpha-
23600
AMACR; 5.1.99.4; 
RVDRPGSR
N/A
N/A
1:100



methylacyl-

ALPHA- METHYLACYL-
YDVSRLGR






CoA 

CoA RACEMASE; 
GKRS (332)






racemase

AMACR DEFICIENCY; 









AMACR ALPHA-









METHYLACYL-CoA 









RACEMASE 









DEFICIENCY; alpha-









methylacyl-CoA 









racemase isoform 









1; alpha-









methylacyl-CoA 









racemase isoform 2









S0415
gamma-
2562
MGC9051; GABRB3; 
ETVDKLLK
N/A
N/A
1:600-



aminobutyric

GABA-A RECEPTOR, 
GYDIRLRP


1:1800



acid (GABA) 

BETA-3 POLYPEPTIDE; 
D (333)






A receptor, 

GAMMA-AMINOBUTYRIC 







beta 3

ACID RECEPTOR, 









BETA-3; gamma-









aminobutyric acid 









(GABA) A receptor,









beta 3; gamma-









aminobutyric acid









(GABA) A receptor, 









beta 3 isoform 2









precursor; gamma-









aminobutyric acid









(GABA) A rece









S0417
HSV-1 
22879
HSRG1; KIAA0872; 
APGGAEDL
N/A
N/A
1:9000



stimulation-

HSV-1 stimulation-
EDTQFPSEE






related gene 

related 1; HSV-1 
ARE (334)






1

stimulation-









related gene 1









S0425
tumor 
27242
TNFRSF21; DR6; 
RKSSRTLK
N/A
N/A
1:9000



necrosis 

BM-018; TNFR-
KGPRQDPS






factor

related death 
AIVE (335)






receptor 

receptor 6; tumor 







superfamily,

necrosis factor 







member 21

receptor 









superfamily, 









member 21; tumor 









necrosis factor









receptor 









superfamily, 









member 21 









precursor









S0429
jumonji 
221037
JMJD1C; TRIP8; 
GSESGDSD
N/A
N/A
1:1200



domain

jumonji domain 
ESESKSEQR






containing 

containing 1C; 
TKR (336)






1C

THYROID HORMONE 









RECEPTOR 









INTERACTOR 8









S0432
chromosome 
null
C9orf140; 
EADSGDAR
N/A
N/A
1:90-



9 open 

chromosome 9 
RLPRARGE


1:300



reading 

open reading 
RRRH (337)






frame 140

frame 140









S0440
cell 
994
3.1.3.48; CDC25B; 
RLERPQDR
N/A
N/A
1:350-



division 

cell division 
DTPVQNKR


1:3600



cycle

cycle 25B; cell 
RRS (338)






25B

division cycle 









25B isoform 4; 









cell division 









cycle 25B isoform 









5; cell division 









cycle 25B isoform 









1; cell division 









cycle 25B isoform 









2; cell division 









cycle 25B isoform 









3









S0445
laminin, 
3912
LAMB1; LAMININ, 
DRVEDVM
N/A
N/A
1:600-



beta 1

BETA-1; CUTIS 
MERESQFK


1:1800





LAXA-MARFANOID 
EKQE (339)








SYNDROME; 









laminin, beta 1; 









laminin, beta 1 









precursor; LAMB1 









NEONATAL CUTIS 









LAXA WITH 









MARFANOID 









PHENOTYPE









S0447
papillary 
5546
TPRC; MGC17178; 
DEAFKRLQ
N/A
N/A
1:4000-



renal cell

MGC4723; PRCC; 
GKRNRGRE


1:6000



carcinoma

proline-rich 
E (340)






(translocation-

protein PRCC; 







associated)

RCCP1 PRCC/TFE3 









FUSION GENE; 









papillary renal 









cell carcinoma









(translocation-









associated); 









RENAL CELL 









CARCINOMA, 









PAPILLARY, 1 









GENE; papillary 









renal cell 









carcinoma 









translocation-









associated gene 









product









S0455
tumor 
8743
APO2L; TL2; 
RFQEEIKEN
N/A
N/A
1:900



necrosis 

Apo-2L; TNFSF10; 
TKNDKQ






factor

Apo-2 ligand; 
(341)






(ligand) 

APO2 LIGAND; 







superfamily,

TNF-RELATED 







member 10

APOPTOSIS-









INDUCING LIGAND; 









TNF-related 









apoptosis 









inducing ligand 









TRAIL; tumor









necrosis factor 









(ligand) 









superfamily, 









member 10; TUMOR 









NECROSIS FACTOR 









LIGAND 









SUPERFAMILY,









MEMBER 10









S0459
titin
7273
connectin; TMD; 
KRDKEGVR
N/A
N/A
1:2700-





titin; CMD1G; 
WTKCNKK


1:8100





CMPD4; TTN;
TLTD (342)








FLJ32040; CMH9, 









included; titin 









isoform N2-A; 









titin isoform 









N2-B; titin 









isoform novex-1; 









titin isoform 









novex-2; titin 









isoform novex-3; 









cardiomyopathy, 









dilated 1G 









(autosomal 









dominant); TTN 









CARDIOMYOPATHY, 









FAMILIAL









S0469
DNA 
1676
DFF45; DFF1; 
KEGSLLSK
N/A
N/A
1:600



fragmentation

DFFA; ICAD; DFF-
QEESKAAF






factor, 45 

45; INHIBITOR OF 
GEE (343)






kDa, alpha

CASPASE-ACTIVATED 







polypeptide

DNase; DNA 









FRAGMENTATION 









FACTOR, 45-









KD, ALPHA 









SUBUNIT;  DNA









fragmentation 









factor, 45 kDa, 









alpha polypeptide; 









DNA fragmentation









factor, 45 kD, 









alpha subunit; DNA









fragmentation 









factor, 45 kD, alp









S0494
caspase 2, 
835
ICH-1L/1S; CASP2; 
ESDAGKEK
N/A
N/A
1:2000



apoptosis-

ICH1; CASP-2; ICH-
LPKMRLPT






related 

1 protease; caspase 
RSD (344)






cysteine 

2 isoform 3; 







protease 

caspase 2 isoform 







(neural 

4; NEDD2 apoptosis 







precursor 

regulatory gene; 







cell 

caspase 2 isoform 







expressed, 

2 precursor; 







developmentally 

caspase 2 isoform 







down-

1 preproprotein; 







regulated 2)

NEURAL PRECURSOR 









CELL EXPRESSED,









DEVELOPMENTALLY









DOWNREGULATED 2;









S0501
G1 to S phase
2935
GSPT1; eRF3a; 
ERDKGKTV
N/A
N/A
1:15000



transition 1

ETF3A; GST1, 
EVGRAYFE








YEAST, HOMOLOG 
TEK (345)








OF; PEPTIDE CHAIN 









RELEASE FACTOR 3A; 









G1-TO S-PHASE 









TRANSITION 1; G1 









to S phase 









transition 1









S0502
GCN5 general 
2648
hGCN5; GCN5L2; 
EKFRVEKD
N/A
N/A
1:9000



control of 

GCN5 (general 
KLVPEKR






amino-acid

control of amino-
(346)






synthesis 

acid synthesis, 







5-like 2

yeast, homolog)-







(yeast)

like 2; GCN5 









general control 









of amino-acid 









synthesis 5-like









2 (yeast); 









General control 









of amino acid 









synthesis, 









yeast, homolog-









like 2









S0503
geminin, 
51053
GMNN; geminin, 
EVAEKRRK
N/A
N/A
1:333



DNA

DNA replication
ALYEALKE






replication 

inhibitor
NEK (347)






inhibitor











S0507
ADP-
64225
ARL6IP2; ADP-
ENYEDDDL
N/A
N/A
1:8000-



ribosylation 

ribosylation 
VNSDEVM


1:9000



factor-like 

factor-like 6 
KKP (348)






6 

interacting 







interacting 

protein 2







protein 2











S0511
DNA 
51659
Pfs2; DNA 
PKADEIRTL
N/A
N/A
1:2000



replication

replication 
VKDMWDT






complex GINS

complex GINS
R (349)






protein PSF2

protein PSF2









S0524
ankyrin 
55608
ANKRD10; 
RKRCLEDS
N/A
N/A
1:4500



repeat 

ankyrin 
EDFGVKKA






domain

repeat 
RTE (350)






10

domain 10









S0527
potassium 
null
KCTD2; 
EPKSFLCRL
N/A
N/A
1:900-



channel

potassium 
CCQEDPEL


1:1500



tetramerisation

channel 
DS (351)






domain 

tetramerisation 







containing 2

domain 









containing 2









S0528
rabconnectin-
23312
RC3; 
EEYDRESK
N/A
N/A
1:350-



3

KIAA0856; 
SSDDVDYR


1:1200





rabconnectin-
GS (352)








3









S0538
acidic 
81611
ANP32E; acidic 
CVNGEIEG
N/A
N/A
1:1200



(leucine-

(leucine-rich) 
LNDTFKEL






rich) nuclear 

nuclear 
EF (353)






phosphoprotein 

phosphoprotein 







32 family, 

32 family, 







member E

member E









S0544
chromosome 9 
84904
C9orf100; 
EQRARWER
N/A
N/A
1:40-



open reading 

chromosome 9 
KRACTARE


1:240



frame 100

open reading 
(354)








frame 100









S0545
HpaII 
27037
D22S1733E; 
ERKQLECE
N/A
N/A
1:900-



tiny 

HTF9C; HpaII 
QVLQKLAK


1:5400



fragments

tiny fragments 
E (355)






locus 9C

locus 9C; HpaII 









tiny fragments 









locus 9C 









isoform2; HpaII 









tiny fragments 









locus 9C 









isoform 1









S0546
cell 
157313
CDCA2; cell 
RNSETKVR
N/A
N/A
1:1200



division 

division cycle 
RSTRLQKD






cycle 

associated 2
LEN (356)






associated 









2











S0553
mitotic
129401
MP44; NUP35; 
SDYQVISD
N/A
N/A
1:3000-



phosphoprotein 

LOC129401; 
RQTPKKDE


1:5400



44

NUCLEOPORIN, 
(357)








35-KD; 









mitotic 









phosphoprotein 









44









S0557
SMC4 
10051
SMC4L1; CAPC; 
DIEGKLPQT
N/A
N/A
1:200



structural

hCAP-C; 
EQELKE






maintenance 

chromosome-
(358)






of

associated 







chromosomes 

polypeptide C; 







4-like 1

SMC4 (structural 







(yeast)

maintenance of 









chromosomes 4, 









yeast)-like 1; 









SMC4 structural 









maintenance of 









chromosomes 4-









like 1 (yeast); 









structural 









maintenance of 









chromosomes (SMC) 









family member, 









chromosome-ass









S0564
phosphatidylserine
9791
KIAA0024; PSSA; 
DDVNYKM
N/A
N/A
1:1000-



synthase 1

PTDSS1;
HFRMINEQ


1:8000





phosphatidylserine 
QVED (359)








synthase 1









S0565
polo-like 
5347
2.7.1.-; PLK1; 
ENPLPERPR
N/A
N/A
1:10-



kinase 1

STPK13; polo-like 
EKEEPVVR


1:100



(Drosophila)

kinase 
(360)








(Drosophila); polo 









(Drosophia)-like 









kinase; SERINE/









THREONINE PROTEIN 









KINASE 13; polo-









like kinase 1 









(Drosophila)









S0567
Pirin
8544
Pirin; PIR
REQSEGVG
N/A
N/A
1:240






ARVRRSIG









RPE (361)








S0578
ATP-binding 
21
ABCA3; ABC3; 
PRAVAGKE
N/A
N/A
1:1500



cassette,

LBM180; ABC-C; 
EEDSDPEK






sub-family 

EST111653; ABC 
ALR (362)






A (ABC1),

transporter 3; 







member 3

ATP-binding 









cassette 3; 









ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE 









TRANSPORTER 3; 









ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE,









SUBFAMILY A, 









MEMBER 3; ATP-









binding 









cassette, sub-









family A member









3; ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-









family A









(ABC1), memb









S0579
ATP-binding  
10347
ABCX; ABCA7; 
EKADTDME
N/A
N/A
1:300-



cassette,

ABCA-SSN; 
GSVDTRQE


1:400



sub-family 

autoantigen 
K (363)






A (ABC1),

SS-N; 







member 7

macrophage ABC 









transporter; 









SJOGREN 









SYNDROME 









ANTIGEN SS-N; 









ATP-BINDING









CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY A, 









MEMBER 7; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family A 









(ABC1), member 7; 









ATP-binding 









cassette, sub-









family A, member 









7 isoform a; A









S0581
ATP-binding 
22
ABCB7; Atm1p; 
RVQNHDNP
N/A
N/A
1:4000-



cassette,

ASAT; ABC7; 
KWEAKKE


1:10000



sub-family B

EST140535; ABC 
NISK (364)






(MDR/TAP), 

TRANSPORTER 7; 







member 7

ATP-binding 









cassette 7; 









ATP-BINDING 









CASSETTE 









TRANSPORTER 7; 









Anemia, 









sideroblastic, 









with 









spinocerebellar









ataxia; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE,









SUBFAMILY B, 









MEMBER 7; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family B,









member









S0585
ATP-binding 
94160
MRP9; ABCC12; 
RSPPAKGA
N/A
N/A
1:500



cassette,

MULTIDRUG 
TGPEEQSD






sub-family C

RESISTANCE-
SLK (365)






(CFTR/MRP),

ASSOCIATED 







member 12

PROTEIN 9; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE, 









SUBFAMILY C, 









MEMBER 12; ATP-









binding cassette, 









sub-family C 









(CFTR/MRP), 









member 12









S0586
ATP-binding 
9429
ABC15; MXR1; ABCP; 
REEDFKAT
N/A
N/A
1:333-



cassette,

EST157481; MRX; 
EIIEPSKQD


1:400



sub-family G

ABCG2; BCRP1; BMDP; 
KP (366)






(WHITE), 

MITOXANTRONE-







member 2

RESISTANCE PROTEIN;









mitoxantrone 









resistance protein;









placenta specific 









MDR protein; ATP-









BINDING CASSETTE









TRANSPORTER, 









PLACENTA-SPECIFIC;









breast cancer 









resistance protein; 









ATP-BINDING CASS









S0593
solute carrier 
28234
OATP1B3; SLC21A8; 
DKTCMKW
N/A
N/A
1:500-



organic anion 

OATP8; SLCO1B3; 
STNSCGAQ


1:2400



transporter

ORGANIC ANION 
(367)






family, 

TRANSPORTER 8; 







member 1B3

solute carrier 









organic anion 









transporter family,









member 1B3; SOLUTE 









CARRIER FAMILY 21,









MEMBER 8 (ORGANIC









ANION TRANSPORTER);









solute carrier









family 21 (organic 









anion transporter), 









member 8









S0597
solute carrier 
9356
ROAT1; MGC45260; 
DANLSKNG
N/A
N/A
1:3000



family 22 

HOAT1; PAHT; 
GLEVWL






(organic anion 

SLC22A6; PAH 
(368)






transporter), 

TRANSPORTER; para-







member 6

aminohippurate 









transporter; renal 









organic anion 









transporter 1; 









solute carrier 









family 22 member 









6 isoform b; 









solute carrier 









family 22 member 









6 isoform c; 









solute carrier 









family 22 member 









6 isoform









S0604
solute carrier 
7355
UGT2; UGTL; UGAT; 
EPFLPKLLT
N/A
N/A
1:2400



family 35 

SLC35A2; UGT1; 
K (369)






(UDP-galactose 

UDP-galactose 







transporter), 

translocator; 







member A2

UDP-GALACTOSE 









TRANSPORTER, 









ISOFORM 2; UGALT









UDP-GALACTOSE









TRANSPORTER, 









ISOFORM 1; solute









carrier family 35 









(UDP-galactose









transporter), 









member A2; solute 









carrier family 35 









(UDP-galactose 









transpo









S0607
cell 
994
3.1.3.48; CDC25B; 
RKSEAGSG
N/A
N/A
1:1800



division 

cell division cycle 
AASSSGED






cycle

25B; cell division 
KEN (370)






25B

cycle 25B isoform 4; 









cell division cycle 









25B isoform 5; cell









division cycle 25B 









isoform 1; cell 









division cycle 25B 









isoform 2; cell 









division cycle 25B 









isoform 3









S0609
stearoyl-
6319
SCD; acyl-CoA 
DDIYDPTY
N/A
N/A
1:2000-



CoA 

desaturase; 
KDKEGPSP


1:5000



desaturase 

stearoyl-CoA 
KVE (371)






(delta-9-

desaturase 







desaturase)

(delta-9-









desaturase); 









fatty acid 









desaturase









S0611
mitogen-
6300
SAPK3; p38gamma; 
QSDEAKNN
N/A
N/A
1:100



activated

SAPK-3; p38-GAMMA; 
MKGLPELE






protein 

PRKM12; MAPK12; 
KKD (372)






kinase 12

ERK3; ERK6; 









EXTRACELLULAR 









SIGNAL-REGULATED 









KINASE 6;









mitogen-activated 









protein kinase 3;









stress-activated 









protein kinase 3;









mitogen-activated 









protein kinase 12









S0612
nuclear 
4791
LYT-10; LYT10; 
SRPQGLTE
N/A
N/A
1:4500



factor of 

NFKB2; ONCOGENE 
AEQRELEQ






kappa light 

LYT 10; 
EAK (373)






polypeptide 

TRANSCRIPTION 







gene 

FACTOR NFKB2; 







enhancer in 

NFKB, p52/p100 







B-cells 2 

SUBUNIT; 







(p49/p100)

LYMPHOCYTE 









TRANSLOCATION









CHROMOSOME 10; 









NUCLEAR FACTOR 









KAPPA-B, SUBUNIT 









2; Nuclear factor 









of kappa light 









chain gene 









enhancer in B-









cells 2; nuclear 









factor of kappa 1









S0613
tumor 
958
Bp50; TNFRSF5; 
RVQQKGTS
N/A
N/A
1:250-



necrosis 

MGC9013; CDW40; 
ETDTIC


1:270



factor

CD40 antigen; CD40L 
(374)






receptor 

receptor; B CELL-







superfamily,

ASSOCIATED MOLECULE 







member 5

CD40; CD40 type II









isoform; B cell 









surface antigen 









CD40; nerve growth 









factor receptor-









related B-lymphocyte 









activation molecule; 









tumor necrosis 









factor receptor 









superfam









S0614
Epstein-
10148
EBI3; IL27, EBI3 
VRLSPLAE
N/A
N/A
1:1200-



Barr virus

SUBUNIT; EPSTEIN-
RQLQVQW


1:3000



induced 

BARR VIRUS-INDUCED 
E (375)






gene 3

GENE 3; 









INTERLEUKIN 27, 









EBI3 SUBUNIT; 









Epstein-Barr virus 









induced gene 3; 









Epstein-Barr virus 









induced gene 3 









precursor









S0616
zinc 
58495
ZNF339; zinc 
RRSLGVSV
N/A
N/A
1:2500



finger 

finger protein 
RSWDELPD






protein

339
EKR (376)






339











S0617
DAB2 
153090
DAB2IP; DAB2 
DEGLGPDP
N/A
N/A
1:600



interacting

interacting 
PHRDRLRS






protein

protein
K (377)








S0618
protein 
8500
MGC26800; LIP1; 
SGKRSSDG
N/A
N/A
1:150



tyrosine

PPFIA1; LIP.1; 
SLSHEEDL






phosphatase, 

LAR-interacting 
AK (378)






receptor

protein 1; PTPRF 







type, f 

interacting protein 







polypeptide

alpha 1 isoform a; 







(PTPRF), 

PTPRF interacting 







interacting

protein alpha 1 







protein 

isoform b; protein 







(liprin), 

tyrosine 







alpha 1

phosphatase, 









receptor type, f









polypeptide (PTPRF), 









interacting protein 









(liprin), alpha 1









S0631
RGM 
56963
RGMA; REPULSIVE 
SQERSDSPE
N/A
N/A
1:600



domain 

GUIDANCE MOLECULE; 
ICHYEKSFH






family,

RGM domain family, 
K (379)






member A

member A









S0633
hypothetical 
144347
LOC144347; 
KVNPEPTH
N/A
N/A
1:100-



protein

hypothetical 
EIRCNSEVK


1:200



LOC144347

protein LOC144347
(380)








S0639
tetratricopeptide
57217
TTC7; 
RELREVLR
N/A
N/A
1:2000-



repeat domain 7

tetratricopeptide 
TVETKATQ


1:3000





repeat domain 7
N (381)








S0640
protein C 
5624
PROC; 3.4.21.69; 
RDTEDQED
N/A
N/A
1:1000-



(inactivator

PROC DEFICIENCY 
QVDPRLID


1:1800



of 

PROTEIN C; 
GK (382)






coagulation 

THROMBOPHILIA, 







factors

HEREDITARY, DUE 







Va and 

TO PC DEFICIENCY;







VIIIa)

PROTEIN C 









DEFICIENCY,









CONGENITAL 









THROMBOTIC









DISEASE DUE TO; 









protein C 









(inactivator of 









coagulation 









factors Va and 









VIIIa)









S0643
transducin-
7090
HsT18976; KIAA1547; 
KNHHELDH
N/A
N/A
1:200-



like

ESG3; TLE3; 
RERESSAN


1:1440



enhancer of 

transducin-like 
(383)






split 3

enhancer protein 3; 







(E(sp1)

enhancer of split 







homolog,

groucho 3; 








Drosophila)


transducin-like 









enhancer of split 3









(E(sp1) homolog, 










Drosophila)










S0645
frizzled 
8324
FzE3; FZD7; frizzled 
SDGRGRPA
N/A
N/A
1:900



homolog 7

7; frizzled homolog 
FPFSCPRQ






(Drosophila)

7 (Drosophila); 
(384)








Frizzled, 










drosophila, homolog 










of, 7









S0646
solute 
6520
MDU1; 4T2HC; SLC3A2; 
GSKEDFDS
N/A
N/A
1:3600-



carrier 

NACAE; 4F2HC; 4F2 
LLQSAKK


1:5400



family 3

HEAVY CHAIN; CD98 
(385)






(activators

HEAVY CHAIN; CD98 







of dibasic

MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY 







and neutral

44D7; ANTIGEN 







amino acid 

DEFINED BY







transport),

MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY 







member 2

4F2, HEAVY CHAIN; 









antigen identified 









by monoclonal 









antibodies 4F2, 









TRA1.10, TROP4, 









and T43; SOLUTE









CARRIER FAMILY 3









S0648
KIAA0738 
9747
KIAA0738; KIAA0738 
EYRNQTNL
N/A
N/A
1:200



gene

gene product
PTENVDK






product


(386)








S0651
phospholipase 
22925
PLA2IR; PLA2-R; 
QKEEKTW
N/A
N/A
1:3600



A2

PLA2R1; PLA2G1R; 
HEALRSCQ






receptor 1, 

PHOSPHOLIPASE A2 
ADN (387)






180 kDa

RECEPTOR, 180-KD; 









phospholipase A2 









receptor 1, 180 









kDa









S0654
KIAA0182 
23199
KIAA0182; 
EKAEEGPR
N/A
N/A
1:400



protein

KIAA0182 protein
KREPAPLD









K (388)








S0659
thymidine 
7084
TK2; THYMIDINE 
EQNRDRIL
N/A
N/A
1:300



kinase 2,

KINASE, 
TPENRK






mitochondrial

MITOCHONDRIAL; 
(389)








thymidine kinase 









2, mitochondrial









S0663
chromosome 14 
64430
Cl4orf135; 
RDWYIGLV
N/A
N/A
1:900



open reading 

chromosome 14 
SDEKWK






frame 135

open reading 
(390)








frame 135









S0665
KIAA1007 
23019
KIAA1007; KIAA1007 
DSYLKTRS
N/A
N/A
1:1500-



protein

protein; adrenal  
PVTFLSDLR


1:3000





gland protein  
(391)








AD-005; KIAA1007  









protein isoform a; 









KIAA1007 protein 









isoform b









S0670
DKFZP566O1646
25936
DC8; 
KCRGETVA
N/A
N/A
1:900



protein

DKFZP566O1646 
KEISEAMK








protein
S (392)








S0672
B-cell
605
BCL7A; B-cell 
QRGSQIGR
N/A
N/A
1:800



CLL/lymphoma 

CLL/lymphoma-7; 
EPIGLSGD






7A

B-cell 
(393)








CLL/lymphoma 7A









S0673
likely 
28987
ART-4; NOB1P; 
KPPQETEK
N/A
N/A
1:50



ortholog of

adenocarcinoma 
GHSACEPE






mouse nin 

antigen recognized 
N (394)






one

by T lymphocytes 







binding 

4; likely ortholog 







protein

of mouse nin one 









binding protein









S0676
guanine 
2768
RMP; NNX3; GNA12; 
ERRAGSGA
N/A
N/A
1:1200-



nucleotide

GUANINE 
RDAERE


1:2400



binding 

NUCLEOTIDE-BINDING 
(395)






protein (G

PROTEIN, ALPHA-12; 







protein) 

guanine nucleotide 







alpha 12

binding protein 









(G protein) alpha 









12









S0677
GrpE-like 1,
80273
HMGE; GRPEL1; 
SEQKADPP
N/A
N/A
1:500-



mitochondrial 

HUMAN 
ATEKTLLE


1:1000



(E.coli)

MITOCHONDRIAL GrpE 
(396)








PROTEIN; GrpE-like 









1, mitochondrial 









(E. coli); GrpE, 










E. COLI, HOMOLOG 










OF, 1









S0684
hypothetical 
91607
FLJ34922; 
EAEWSQGV
N/A
N/A
1:8100



protein

hypothetical 
QGTLRIKK






FLJ34922

protein FLJ34922
YLT (397)








S0687
hypothetical 
54942
FLJ20457; 
EESKSITEG
N/A
N/A
1:600-



protein

hypothetical 
LLTQKQYE


1:1260



FLJ20457

protein FLJ20457
(398)








S0691
solute 
23657
CCBR1; SLC7A11; 
QNFKDAFS
N/A
N/A
1:1000-



carrier 

xCT; cystine/
GRDSSITR


1:1575



family 7, 

glutamate 
(399)






(cationic 

transporter; 







amino acid 

SYSTEM Xc(-) 







transporter, 

TRANSPORTER-







y+ system)

RELATED PROTEIN; 







member 11

SOLUTE CARRIER 









FAMILY 7, MEMBER 









11; solute 









carrier family 7, 









(cationic amino









acid transporter, 









y+ system) member 









11









S0692
glutamate-
2729
GLCLC; GCLC; 
EKIHLDDA
N/A
N/A
1:100-



cysteine

6.3.2.2; GCS; 
NESDHFEN


1:400



ligase, 

GAMMA-
(400)






catalytic

GLUTAMYLCYSTEINE 







subunit

SYNTHETASE, 









CATALYTIC









SUBUNIT; 









glutamate-









cysteine ligase,









catalytic 









subunit









S0695
integrin, 
3691
ITGB4; INTEGRIN, 
TEDVDEFR
N/A
N/A
1:2700-



beta 4

BETA-4;
NKLQGER


1:4050





integrin, beta 4
(401)








S0702
solute 
8140
SLC7A5; MPE16; 
KGDVSNLD
N/A
N/A
1:21160-



carrier 

D16S469E; CD98; 
PNFSFEGTK


1:178200



family 7

LAT1; 4F2 light 
LDV (402)






(cationic 

chain; Membrane 







amino acid

protein E16; L-







transporter, 

TYPE AMINO ACID 







y+ system), 

TRANSPORTER 1; 







member 5

Solute carrier 









family 7, 









member 5; solute 









carrier family 7 









(cationic amino 









acid transporter, 









y+ system), 









member 5









S0705
breast 
25855
DKFZp564A063; 
KARAAVSP
N/A
N/A
1:1000-



cancer

BRMS1; breast 
QKRKSDGP


1:2000



metastasis 

cancer 
(403)






suppressor

metastasis-







1

suppressor 1; 









breast cancer 









metastasis 









suppressor 1









S0706
KiSS-1 
3814
MGC39258; KISS1; 
RQIPAPQG
N/A
N/A
1:180



metastasis-

KiSS-1 
AVLVQREK






suppressor

metastasis-
D (404)








suppressor; 









KISS1 METASTIN; 









malignant 









melanoma 









metastasis-









suppressor; KISS1









METASTASIS 









SUPPRESSOR









S0708
cofactor 
9439
DKFZp434H0117; 
SVKEQVEK
N/A
N/A
1:2430



required for

CRSP133; SUR2; 
IICNLKPAL






Sp1 

DRIP130; CRSP3; 
K (138)






transcriptional

mediator; 







activation, 

transcriptional 







subunit 3,

co-activator 







130 kDa

CRSP130; CRSP, 









130-KD SUBUNIT; 









CRSP 130-kD 









subunit; 133 kDa









transcriptional 









co-activator; 









130 kDa









transcriptional 









co-activator; 









vitamin D3 









receptor 









interacting 









protein; c



















S5002
keratin 14
3861
CK; KRT14; K14; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



(epidermolysis 

EBS4; EBS3; 
from Chemicon
















bullosa

cytokeratin 14; 







simplex, 

CK 14; KERATIN, 







Dowling-

TYPE I 







Meara, 

CYTOSKELETAL 14; 







Koebner)

keratin 14 









(epidermolysis 









bullosa simplex, 









Dowling-Meara, 









Koebner)



















S5003
keratin 17
3872
PCHC1; PC; PC2; 
Antibody obtained 
1:10-





39.1; KRT17; K17; 
from Dako
1:25

















CYTOKERATIN 17; 









VERSION 1; CK 17; 









KERATIN, TYPE I









CYTOSKELETAL 17



















S5004
keratin 18
3875
K18; CYK18; 
Antibody obtained 
1:200-





KRT18;  
from Dako
1:400

















CYTOKERATIN 18;  









CK 18; KERATIN, 









TYPE I 









CYTOSKELETAL 18



















S5005
keratin 18
3875
K18; CYK18; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50-





KRT18; 
from Becton Dickinson
1:100

















CYTOKERATIN 18; 









CK 18; KERATIN, 









TYPE I 









CYTOSKELETAL 18



















S5012
tumor-
4072
TROP1; LY74; 
Antibody obtained 
1:40



associated

Ep-CAM; GA733-2; 
from Oncogene




calcium 

EGP40; MK-1; 
Research Products 




signal

C017-1A; EPCAM; 
(Calbiochem)
















transducer 

M4S1; KSA; 







1

TACSTD1; EGP; 









MK-1 antigen; 









EPITHELIAL 









CELLULAR 









ADHESION 









MOLECULE;









GASTROINTESTINAL 









TUMOR-ASSOCIATED 









ANTIGEN 2, 35-KD









GLYCOPROTEIN; 









tumor-associated









calcium signal 









transducer 1 









precurso



















S5014
estrogen 
2100
ER-BETA; ESR-
Antibody obtained 
1:2500



receptor 

BETA; ESR2; Erb; 
from Oncogene




2

ESRB; NR3A2; 
Research Products 




(ER beta)

ESTROGEN  
(Calbiochem)


















RECEPTOR, BETA;  









estrogen receptor









2 (ER beta)



















S5038
mucin 1,
4582
PEMT; MUC1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



transmembrane

episialin; EMA; 
from Imperial Cancer






PUM; H23AG; CD227; 
Research Technology 






PEM; CARCINOMA-
(ICRT)






ASSOCIATED MUCIN; 



















H23 antigen; 









TUMOR-ASSOCIATED 









MUCIN; DF3 









antigen; peanut-









reactive urinary 









mucin; mucin 1, 









transmembrane; 









polymorphic









epithelial mucin; 









MUCIN 1, URINARY; 









MUCIN, TUMOR-









ASSOCIATE



















S5044
transferrin 
7037
P90; TR; TFRC; 
Antibody obtained 
1:20



receptor

TFR; CD71; T9; 
from NeoMarkers
















(p90, CD71)

TRFR; ANTIGEN 









CD71; TRANSFERRIN 









RECEPTOR PROTEIN; 









transferrin 









receptor (p90, 









CD71)



















S5045
v-erb-b2
2064
HER-2; ERBB2; 
Antibody obtained 
1:600



erythroblastic

NGL; P185ERBB2; 
from NeoMarkers
















leukemia viral

HER2; C-ERBB-2; 







oncogene 

NEU; MLN 19; EC 







homolog 2, 

2.7.1.112; TKR1 







neuro/

HERSTATIN; NEU 







glioblastoma

PROTO-ONCOGENE; 







derived 

ONCOGENE ERBB2; 







oncogene

RECEPTOR 







homolog 

PROTEIN-TYROSINE 







(avian)

KINASE ERBB-2 









PRECURSOR; 









ONCOGENE NGL, 









NEUROBLASTOMA- OR









GLIOBLASTOMA-









DERIVED; TYROSINE









KINASE-TYPE CELL



















S5047
major vault 
9961
MVP; LRP; VAULT1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:300



protein

LUNG RESISTANCE-
from NeoMarkers


















RELATED PROTEIN;









MAJOR VAULT 









PROTEIN, RAT, 









HOMOLOG OF



















S5064
tumor  
8626
LMS; TP73L; KET; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



protein

SHFM4; p73H; EEC3; 
from Dako
















p73-like

TP63; p51; TUMOR 









PROTEIN p63; 









TUMOR PROTEIN 









p73-LIKE; p53-









RELATED PROTEIN 









p63; tumor protein 









63 kDa with strong 









homology to p53



















S5065
estrogen 
2099
ER; NR3A1; ESR1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:20



receptor 

Era; ESR; ER-ALPHA; 
from Dako
















1

ESRA; ESTRADIOL









RECEPTOR; ESTROGEN









RECEPTOR, ALPHA; 









estrogen receptor 1 









(alpha)



















S5066
v-erb-b2
2064
HER-2; ERBB2; NGL; 
Antibody obtained 
1:300



erythroblastic

P185ERBB2; HER2; 
from Dako
















leukemia viral

C-ERBB-2; NEU; MLN 







oncogene 

19; EC 2.7.1.112; 







homolog 2, 

TKR1 HERSTATIN; NEU 







neuro/

PROTO-ONCOGENE; 







glioblastoma

ONCOGENE ERBB2; 







derived 

RECEPTOR PROTEIN-







oncogene

TYROSINE KINASE 







homolog 

ERBB-2 PRECURSOR; 







(avian)

ONCOGENE NGL, 









NEUROBLASTOMA- OR









GLIOBLASTOMA-









DERIVED;









TYROSINE KINASE-









TYPE CELL



















S5067
cathepsin D
1509
CTSD; MGC2311; 
Antibody obtained 
1:20-



(lysosomal 

CPSD; EC 3.4.23.5; 
from Dako
1:50















aspartyl

cathepsin D 







protease)

preproprotein; 









Cathepsin D 









precursor; 









cathepsin D









(lysosomal 









aspartyl 









protease);



















S5069
CA 125
n/a

Antibody obtained 
1:20






from Dako






S5070
CA 15-3
n/a

Antibody obtained 
1:50






from Dako






S5071
CA 19-9
n/a

Antibody obtained 
1:50






from Dako






S5072
v-myc
4609
c-Myc; MYC; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



myelocytomatosis

ONCOGENE MYC; 
from Dako
















viral oncogene

Myc proto-







homolog (avian)

oncogene protein; 









PROTOONCOGENE 









HOMOLOGOUS TO









MYELOCYTOMATOSIS 









VIRUS; v-myc 









myelocytomatosis 









viral oncogene









homolog (avian); 









v-myc avian









myelocytomatosis 









viral oncogene









homolog; Avian 









myelocytomatosis









viral (v-myc) 









onco



















S5073
cadherin 1, 
999
CDH1; Cadherin-1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:100-



type 1, E-

Arc-1; ECAD; CDHE; 
from Dako
1:150















cadherin 

Uvomorulin; LCAM;







(epithelial)

Epithelial-









cadherin 









precursor; cell-









CAM 120/80; 









CADHERIN, 









EPITHELIAL; 









calcium-dependent









adhesion protein, 









epithelial; 









cadherin 1, 









E-cadherin 









(epithelial); 









cadherin 1,









type 1 









preproprotein; 









cadherin 1,



















S5074
glutathione 
2950
GSTP1; DFN7; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



S-

GSTP1-1; GST3; 
from Dako
















transferase 

GSTPP; GST class-







pi

pi; glutathione 









transferase; EC 









2.5.1.18; 









glutathione S-









transferase pi; 









GST, CLASS PI;









deafness, 









X-linked 7;









GLUTATHIONE S-









TRANSFERASE 3;









GLUTATHIONE S-









TRANSFERASE, PI; 









FAEES3 









GLUTATHIONE S-









TRANSFERASE PI 









PSEUD



















S5075
tumor 
7157
p53; TP53; TRP53;
Antibody obtained 
1:50



protein 

PHOSPHOPROTEIN P53;
from Dako
















p53 (Li-

TRANSFORMATION-







Fraumeni 

RELATED PROTEIN 53; 







syndrome)

TUMOR SUPPRESSOR 









P53; CELLULAR TUMOR 









ANTIGEN P53; tumor









protein p53 (Li-









Fraumeni syndrome)



















S5076
progesterone 
5241
NR3C3; PR; PGR; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



receptor

PROGESTERONE 
from Dako


















RESISTANCE; 









PSEUDOCORPUS









LUTEUM 









INSUFFICIENCY









PROGESTERONE 









RECEPTOR



















S5077
trefoil 
7031

Antibody obtained 
1:50-



factor 1 


from Dako
1:100















(breast 









cancer, 









estrogen-









inducible 









sequence









expressed 









in)





















S5079
enolase 2, 
2026
NSE; ENO2; 2-
Antibody obtained 
1:400



(gamma,

phospho-D-
from Dako
















neuronal)

glycerate 









hydro-lyase; 









ENOLASE, GAMMA;









neurone-specific 









enolase; ENOLASE,









NEURON-SPECIFIC; 









2-phospho-D-









glycerate 









hydrolyase; EC 









4.2.1.11; Neural 









enolase; enolase-









2, gamma,









neuronal; neuron 









specific gamma









enolase; enolase 









2, (gamma,



















S5080
B-cell
596
BCL2; FOLLICULAR 
Antibody obtained 
1:50



CLL/

LYMPHOMA; 
from Dako
















lymphoma 2

APOPTOSIS 









REGULATOR BCL-2;









B-cell CLL/









lymphoma 2; 









B-cell lymphoma 









protein 2 alpha; 









B-cell lymphoma 









protein 2 beta;









ONCOGENE B-CELL 









LEUKEMIA 2 









LEUKEMIA, CHRONIC









LYMPHATIC, TYPE 2



















S5081
retinoblastoma 
5925
p105-Rb; PP110; 
Antibody obtained 
1:20



1 (including

Retinoblastoma-1; 
from Dako
















osteosarcoma)

RB; RB1; 









RETINOBLASTOMA-









ASSOCIATED 









PROTEIN; RB









OSTEOSARCOMA,









RETINOBLASTOMA-









RELATED; 









retinoblastoma 1 









(including









osteosarcoma)



















S5082
synaptophysin
6855
SYP; Synaptophysin; 
Antibody obtained 
1:50





Major synaptic 
from Dako


















vesicle protein P38



















S5083
BCL2-
581
BAX; BCL2-
Antibody obtained 
1:500



associated X

associated X 
from Dako
















protein

protein; APOPTOSIS 









REGULATOR BAX, 









MEMBRANE ISOFORM 









ALPHA



















S5086
estrogen 
2100
ER-BETA; ESR-BETA; 
Antibody obtained 
1:200



receptor 2

ESR2; Erb; ESRB; 
from Abcam
















(ER beta)

NR3A2; ESTROGEN 









RECEPTOR, BETA; 









estrogen receptor









2 (ER beta)



















S5087
mucin 1,
4582
PEMT; MUC1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:200-



transmembrane

episialin; EMA; 
from Zymed
1:1600

















PUM; H23AG; CD227; 









PEM; CARCINOMA-









ASSOCIATED MUCIN; 









H23 antigen; TUMOR-









ASSOCIATED MUCIN; 









DF3 antigen; 









peanut-reactive 









urinary mucin; 









mucin 1, 









transmembrane; 









polymorphic









epithelial mucin; 









MUCIN 1, URINARY; 









MUCIN, TUMOR-









ASSOCIATE



















S6001
estrogen 
2099
ER; NR3A1; ESR1; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



receptor 1

Era; ESR; ER-ALPHA; 
from US Labs


















ESRA; ESTRADIOL









RECEPTOR; ESTROGEN









RECEPTOR, ALPHA; 









estrogen receptor 1 









(alpha)



















S6002
progesterone 
5241
NR3C3; PR; PGR; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



receptor

PROGESTERONE 
from US Labs


















RESISTANCE; 









PSEUDOCORPUS









LUTEUM 









INSUFFICIENCY









PROGESTERONE 









RECEPTOR



















S6003
v-erb-b2
2064
HER-2; ERBB2; NGL; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



erythroblastic

P185ERBB2; HER2; 
from US Labs
















leukemia viral

C-ERBB-2; NEU; MLN 







oncogene 

19; EC 2.7.1.112; 







homolog 2, 

TKR1 HERSTATIN; 







neuro/

NEU PROTO-ONCOGENE; 







glioblastoma

ONCOGENE ERBB2; 







derived 

RECEPTOR PROTEIN-







oncogene

TYROSINE KINASE 







homolog 

ERBB-2 PRECURSOR; 







(avian)

ONCOGENE NGL, 









NEUROBLASTOMA- OR









GLIOBLASTOMA-









DERIVED; TYROSINE 









KINASE-TYPE CELL



















S6004
B-cell
596
BCL2; FOLLICULAR 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



CLL/

LYMPHOMA; APOPTOSIS 
from US Labs
















lymphoma 2

REGULATOR BCL-2; 









B-cell CLL/lymphoma 









2; B-cell lymphoma 









protein 2 alpha; 









B-cell lymphoma 









protein 2 beta;









ONCOGENE B-CELL 









LEUKEMIA 2  









LEUKEMIA, CHRONIC 









LYMPHATIC, TYPE 2



















S6005
keratin 5
3852
KRT5; EBS2; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



(epidermolysis 

Keratin-5; K5; 
from US Labs
















bullosa 

CYTOKERATIN 5; CK 







simplex, 

5; 58 KDA 







Dowling-Meara/

CYTOKERATIN; 







Kobner/Weber-

KERATIN, TYPE II 







Cockayne 

CYTOSKELETAL 5; 







types)

keratin 5 









(epidermolysis 









bullosa simplex,









Dowling-Meara/









Kobner/Weber-









Cockayne types)



















S6006
tumor 
7157
p53; TP53; TRP53;
Antibody obtained 
1:1



protein 

PHOSPHOPROTEIN 
from US Labs
















p53 (Li-

P53; 







Fraumeni 

TRANSFORMATION-







syndrome)

RELATED PROTEIN 









53; TUMOR 









SUPPRESSOR P53; 









CELLULAR TUMOR 









ANTIGEN P53; 









tumor protein  









p53 (Li-Fraumeni 









syndrome)



















S6007
KI67
n/a

Antibody obtained 
1:1






from US Labs






S6008
epidermal 
1956
S7; EGFR; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



growth factor 

2.7.1.112; ERBB; 
from US Labs
















receptor 

ONCOGENE ERBB; 







(erythroblastic

ERBB1 SPECIES 







leukemia viral

ANTIGEN 7; V-ERB-







(v-erb-b) 

B AVIAN 







oncogene 

ERYTHROBLASTIC 







homolog,

LEUKEMIA VIRAL 







avian)

ONCOGENE HOMOLOG; 









epidermal growth 









factor receptor 









(avian 









erythroblastic 









leukemia viral 









(v-erb-b) 









oncogene homolog)



















S6011
enolase 2, 
2026
NSE; ENO2; 2-
Antibody obtained 
1:1



(gamma,

phospho-D-
from US Labs
















neuronal)

glycerate hydro-









lyase; ENOLASE, 









GAMMA; neurone-









specific enolase; 









ENOLASE, NEURON-









SPECIFIC; 2-









phospho-D-









glycerate 









hydrolyase; 









EC 4.2.1.11; 









Neural enolase; 









enolase-2, gamma,









neuronal; neuron 









specific gamma









enolase; enolase 









2, (gamma,



















S6012
thyroid 
7080
benign chorea; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



transcription

chorea, hereditary 
from US Labs
















factor 1

benign; NK-2 









(Drosophila) 









homolog A (thyroid 









nuclear factor); 









Thyroid









transcription 









factor 1 (NK-2, 










Drosophila, 










homolog of, A); 









BCH; BHC; TEBP; 









TTF1; NKX2A; 









TTF-1; NKX2.1



















S6013
v-erb-b2
2064
HER-2; ERBB2; NGL; 
Antibody obtained 
1:1



erythroblastic

P185ERBB2; HER2; 
from US Labs
















leukemia viral

C-ERBB-2; NEU; 







oncogene 

MLN 19; EC 







homolog 2, 

2.7.1.112; TKR1 







neuro/

HERSTATIN; NEU 







glioblastoma

PROTO-ONCOGENE; 







derived 

ONCOGENE ERBB2; 







oncogene

RECEPTOR PROTEIN-







homolog 

TYROSINE KINASE 







(avian)

ERBB-2 PRECURSOR; 









ONCOGENE NGL, 









NEUROBLASTOMA- OR









GLIOBLASTOMA-









DERIVED; TYROSINE









KINASE-TYPE CELL









Other Embodiments

Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a consideration of the specification or practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with the true scope of the invention being indicated by the following claims.

Claims
  • 1. A method of treating breast, lung or ovarian cancer in a patient comprising administering to the patient a taxane or taxane derivative, wherein the patient's cancer has been previously identified to express TLE3 polypeptide.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the patient's cancer is breast cancer.
  • 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the patient is triple negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER-2 markers.
  • 4. The method of claim 2, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 5. The method of claim 2, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 6. The method of claim 1, wherein the patient's cancer is lung cancer.
  • 7. The method of claim 6, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 8. The method of claim 6, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 9. The method of claim 1, wherein the patient's cancer is ovarian cancer.
  • 10. The method of claim 9, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 11. The method of claim 9, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 12. A method of treating breast, lung, or ovarian cancer in a patient, wherein the cancer has been identified as positive for TLE3 polypeptide expression, the method comprising administering a taxane or taxane derivative to the patient.
  • 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the cancer is breast cancer.
  • 14. The method of claim 13, wherein the patient is triple negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER-2 markers.
  • 15. The method of claim 13, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 16. The method of claim 13, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 17. The method of claim 12, wherein the cancer is lung cancer.
  • 18. The method of claim 17, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 19. The method of claim 17, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 20. The method of claim 12, wherein the cancer is ovarian cancer.
  • 21. The method of claim 20, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 22. The method of claim 20, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 23. A method of treating breast cancer in a patient, wherein the patient is triple negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER-2 markers and the cancer has been identified as positive for TLE3 polypeptide expression, the method comprising administering a taxane to the patient.
  • 24. The method of claim 23, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 25. The method of claim 23, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 26. A method of treating lung or ovarian cancer in a patient, wherein the cancer has been identified as positive for TLE3 polypeptide expression, the method comprising administering a taxane to the patient.
  • 27. The method of claim 26, wherein the taxane is paclitaxel.
  • 28. The method of claim 26, wherein the taxane is docetaxel.
  • 29. The method of claim 26, wherein the cancer is lung cancer.
  • 30. The method of claim 26, wherein the cancer is ovarian cancer.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/889,630, filed Sep. 24, 2010, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/277,920, filed Nov. 25, 2008, (issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,816,084), which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/991,487, filed Nov. 30, 2007, each of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60991487 Nov 2007 US
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 12889630 Sep 2010 US
Child 13685924 US
Parent 12277920 Nov 2008 US
Child 12889630 US