Microscopic slides with blood samples
Multiple microscopic slides with stained blood smears, ready for testing. Healthcare and medical research concept.

Research conducted at Purdue University by biochemist W. Andy Tao, Ph.D., details that development of a new protein array that can detect certain types of proteins that are indicators or cancer and other diseases.

Dr. Tao, reports the development of a new protein array—a high-throughput platform to analyze multiple proteins in parallel—for separating glycoproteins from unmodified proteins. Dr. Tao also demonstrated its effectiveness for identifying glycoproteins associated with bladder cancer. The findings (“Three-Dimensionally Functionalized Reverse Phase Glycoprotein Array for Cancer Biomarker Discovery and Validation”) are published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. 

Glycoproteins are formed when sugars attach to and modify a protein. In some cases, a combination of glycoproteins present in a sample of blood or urine could be an indicator of disease or cancer. But those glycoproteins can be elusive. There has been no antibody to differentiate between them and regular proteins. And the complex and bulky sugar groups can make it difficult for even standard protein-detection antibodies to find their targets.

Dr. Tao developed a nano-sized polymer, called polyGPA (poly GlycoProtein Array), that attaches to the sugar groups of glycoproteins and brings them to the surface of the protein array. The nanopolymer also repositions the glycoprotein so that the antibodies used to detect unmodified proteins can better reach their targets.

“There are many sugar types and combinations. Sugar modification can be a very important indication of disease state,” Dr. Tao said. “A panel of proteins modified by sugars may be an indication of a particular disease.”

He noted that tests showed his method is 17 to 25 times more likely to identify proteins that might have otherwise been missed in regular testing procedures. He was also able to identify glycoproteins associated with bladder cancer in a urine sample.

“It is possible to use our platform to identify these sugar-modified proteins as a biomarker for bladder cancer,” added Dr. Tao, who plans to work to commercialize his nanopolymer-modified protein array through his company, Tymora Analytical Operations, which operates in the Purdue University Research Park. The company makes the pIMAGO nanopolymer, which can be used to determine whether cancer drugs have been effective against biochemical processes that can lead to cancer cell formation, and polyMAC, a nanopolymer that helps scientists retrieve and study proteins that are undergoing processes related to cancer cell formation.

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