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Mouse PSP94 expression is prostate tissue-specific as demonstrated by a comparison of multiple antibodies against recombinant proteins

✍ Scribed by Anuradha Thota; Meera Karajgikar; Wenming Duan; Manal Y. Gabril; Franky L. Chan; Yong-Chuan Wong; Hideki Sakai; Joseph L. Chin; Madeleine Moussa; Jim W. Xuan


Book ID
102875700
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
537 KB
Volume
88
Category
Article
ISSN
0730-2312

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Prostate tissue‐specific gene expression is crucial for driving potentially therapeutic genes to target specifically to the prostate. Prostate secretory protein of 94 amino acids (PSP94), also known as β‐MSP (microseminoprotein), is one of the three most abundant secretory proteins of the prostate gland, and is generally considered to be prostate tissue‐specific. We have previously demonstrated that the expression of the rat PSP94 gene is strictly prostate tissue‐specific by an antibody against a recombinant rat PSP94. In order to study prostate targeting utilizing the PSP94 gene in a mouse pre‐clinical experimental model, we need to establish antibodies against mouse PSP94 to confirm if it is prostate tissue‐specific as well. In this study, firstly we raised a polyclonal antibody against a recombinant glutathione‐S‐transferase‐ (GST‐) mouse mature form of PSP94. However, it showed very poor immunoreactivity against prostate tissue PSP94 as tested in Western blotting experiments. Neither antibodies against rat PSP94 nor mouse PSP94 showed significant cross‐reactivity. Thus a second antibody was established against a recombinant mouse mature PSP94 containing N‐terminal polyhistidines, and stronger immunoreactivity against mouse prostate tissue PSP94 was identified in Western blotting experiments. Both of these antibodies showed immunohistochemical reactivity, while the latter showed stronger reactivity in IHC when tested with different fixatives. By studying tissue distribution, we demonstrated that, as with rat PSP94, mouse PSP94 is strictly prostate tissue‐specific in experiments of both Western blotting and immunohistochemistry (IHC). This conclusion was also derived from a comparison among antibodies against human, rat, and mouse PSP94, showing very different immunoreactivities in Western blotting and IHC. Finally, a competitive assay between different species was performed. We demonstrated that antibodies against PSP94 from different species (human, primate, rodents) have poor cross‐reactivities. These observations also indicate that the PSP94 gene is a rapidly evolving gene in all species. Results from this study have led to the possibility of utilizing PSP94 as a targeting agent specifically to the prostate in a mouse experimental model. J. Cell. Biochem. 88: 999–1011, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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Differential expression of PSP94 in rat
✍ Joseph Kwong; Franky L. Chan; Sean Jiang; Yuzhen Guo; Yushi Imasato; Hideki Saka 📂 Article 📅 1999 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 250 KB

Prostate secretory protein (PSP94, 94 amino acids) is one of the most abundant proteins secreted from the prostate. Its biological role is unknown and still controversial, although it is assumed to have the potential to be a biomarker and a suppressor of prostate cancer. In order to establish an ani