Metabolomics,Unknown,Transcriptomics,Genomics,Proteomics

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Individual aiEMT in surgical samples of esophageal cancer patients


ABSTRACT: Surgical samples have long been used as important subjects for cancer research. In accordance with an increase of neoadjuvant therapy, biopsy samples have recently become imperative for cancer transcriptome. On the other hand, both biopsy and surgical samples are available for expression profiling for predicting clinical outcome by adjuvant therapy; however, it is still unclear whether surgical sample expression profiles are useful for the prediction by the use of biopsy samples because little has been done about comparative gene expression profiling between the two kinds of samples. When gene expression profiles were compared between biopsy and surgical samples, artificially induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (aiEMT) was found in the surgical samples. This study will evoke the fundamental misinterpretation including underestimation of the prognostic evaluation power of markers by overestimation of EMT in past cancer research, and will furnish some advice for the near future as follows: 1) Understanding how long the tissues were under an ischemic condition; 2) Prevalence of biopsy samples for in vivo expression profiling with low biases on basic and clinical research; and 3) Checking cancer cell contents and normal- or necrotic-tissue contamination in biopsy samples for prevalence. We used microarrays to compare gene expression profiles between 20 biopsy (BPY) and 20 surgical (OPE) samples derived from the cancerous portion of the esophagus of 20 esophageal cancer patients. One biopsy sample and one surgical sample was obtained from each patient; these sample pairs have the same number.

ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens

SUBMITTER: Kazuhiko Aoyagi 

PROVIDER: E-GEOD-32701 | biostudies-arrayexpress |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress

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Publications

Artificially induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition in surgical subjects: its implications in clinical and basic cancer research.

Aoyagi Kazuhiko K   Minashi Keiko K   Igaki Hiroyasu H   Tachimori Yuji Y   Nishimura Takao T   Hokamura Norikazu N   Ashida Akio A   Daiko Hiroyuki H   Ochiai Atsushi A   Muto Manabu M   Ohtsu Atsushi A   Yoshida Teruhiko T   Sasaki Hiroki H  

PloS one 20110421 4


<h4>Background</h4>Surgical samples have long been used as important subjects for cancer research. In accordance with an increase of neoadjuvant therapy, biopsy samples have recently become imperative for cancer transcriptome. On the other hand, both biopsy and surgical samples are available for expression profiling for predicting clinical outcome by adjuvant therapy; however, it is still unclear whether surgical sample expression profiles are useful for prediction via biopsy samples, because li  ...[more]

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