Comparative Effect of Herceptin and Its Biosimilar: Transcriptomic and Proteomic Insights from HER2-Positive Cancer Cell Lines
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Date
2025-07-31
Authors
Advisor
McConkey, Brendan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
The first patent for the therapeutic monoclonal antibody Herceptin expired in 2019,
opening the door for the development of biosimilars. Biosimilars are copies of the originator
product that must demonstrate biosimilarity for regulatory approval. This is a very difficult
task. Antibodies are large molecules that undergo extensive post-translational modifications
(PTMs), which affect their potency, stability, binding affinity, and immunogenicity. Batches
of the originator products often vary in their PTM patterns, making structural similarity very
difficult to prove. Despite these challenges, most biosimilar development workflows rely on
targeted wet-lab assays to assess structural similarity, purity, and efficacy, often without
addressing the full complexity of the task.
Herceptin targets the surface receptor HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2)
on breast cancer cells, inducing global cellular changes including cell arrest, programmed
cell death, reduced motility, and angiogenesis. The complete mode of action is under
investigation, and the development of resistance to Herceptin is common and complex. Due
to these gaps in knowledge and complexity of Herceptin’s effect, untargeted omics
techniques, such as transcriptomics and proteomics, are ideally suited for functionally
comparing biosimilars to their originator product.
Therefore, the primary goal of this thesis is to evaluate whether transcriptomics and
proteomics experiments are useful for investigating the impact of the biosimilar on target
cells compared to the originator product. To this end, Herceptin’s effect on the breast cancer
cell lines BT474, SKBR3 and MCF7 will be compared to a biosimilar, called Apotex-
Trastuzumab (ApoTras), provided by Apobiologix (Toronto, Canada). This analysis will
allow us to investigate the sensitivity of the methods in detecting differences and
determining how many of the known effects can be identified. This work will provide
valuable insights into the use of untargeted omics approaches for investigating the functional
similarity of a biosimilar to its originator product.
Description
Keywords
RNA-seq, Proteomics, biosimilar, Herceptin, Breast cancer, trastuzumab, Multi-omics, Her2+ breast cancer