Ultrasensitive Detection of Circulating LINE-1 ORF1p as a Specific Multicancer Biomarker.
Martin S Taylor, Connie Wu, Peter C Fridy, Stephanie J Zhang, Yasmeen Senussi, Justina C Wolters, Tatiana Cajuso, Wen-Chih Cheng, John D Heaps, Bryant D Miller, Kei Mori, Limor Cohen, Hua Jiang, Kelly R Molloy, Brian T Chait, Michael G Goggins, Irun Bhan, Joseph W Franses, Xiaoyu Yang, Mary-Ellen Taplin
December 2023 Cancer DiscovAbstract
Unlabelled: Improved biomarkers are needed for early cancer detection, risk stratification, treatment selection, and monitoring treatment response. Although proteins can be useful blood-based biomarkers, many have limited sensitivity or specificity for these applications. Long INterspersed Element-1 (LINE-1) open reading frame 1 protein (ORF1p) is a transposable element protein overexpressed in carcinomas and high-risk precursors during carcinogenesis with negligible expression in normal tissues, suggesting ORF1p could be a highly specific cancer biomarker. To explore ORF1p as a blood-based biomarker, we engineered ultrasensitive digital immunoassays that detect mid-attomolar (10-17 mol/L) ORF1p concentrations in plasma across multiple cancers with high specificity. Plasma ORF1p shows promise for early detection of ovarian cancer, improves diagnostic performance in a multianalyte panel, provides early therapeutic response monitoring in gastroesophageal cancers, and is prognostic for overall survival in gastroesophageal and colorectal cancers. Together, these observations nominate ORF1p as a multicancer biomarker with potential utility for disease detection and monitoring.
Significance: The LINE-1 ORF1p transposon protein is pervasively expressed in many cancers and is a highly specific biomarker of multiple common, lethal carcinomas and their high-risk precursors in tissue and blood. Ultrasensitive ORF1p assays from as little as 25 μL plasma are novel, rapid, cost-effective tools in cancer detection and monitoring. See related commentary by Doucet and Cristofari, p. 2502. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 2489.