Project description:NCI-60 cancer cell lines were profiled with their genome-wide gene expression patterns using Affymetrix HG-U133A chips. Keywords: NCI-60 cancer cell line expression profiling
Project description:The aim was to determine the effect of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) overexpression on microRNA transcriptome in human non-small cell lung carcinoma cell line (NCI-H292). Since the cells of different HO-1 genotypes were used (cells are after retroviral transduction with empty vector with normal level of HO-1 or retroviral transduction with vector harboring HO-1), it is possible get the comprehensive answer which microRNAs are regulated by HO-1.
Project description:The aim was to determine the effect of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) overexpression on microRNA transcriptome in human non-small cell lung carcinoma cell line (NCI-H292). Since the cells of different HO-1 genotypes were used (cells are after retroviral transduction with empty vector with normal level of HO-1 or retroviral transduction with vector harboring HO-1), it is possible get the comprehensive answer which microRNAs are regulated by HO-1. Confluent NCI-H292 cells that contain EV-ctrl or overexpressing HO-1. Pool of reference cells are cells untreated and treated with 10 ng/ml TNF-M-NM-1 for 6 hours before RNA isolation. The samples are biological triplicates - three independent experiments were performed at different time points for all cell lines. Total number of the presented samples is 6.
Project description:Reference materials are vital to benchmarking the reproducibility of clinical tests and essential for monitoring laboratory performance for clinical proteomics. The reference material utilized for mass spectrometric analysis of the human proteome would ideally contain enough proteins to be suitably representative of the human proteome, as well as exhibit a stable protein composition in different batches of sample regeneration. Previously, The Clinical Proteomic Tumor Analysis Consortium (CPTAC) utilized PDX-derived comparative reference (CompRef) materials for the longitudinal assessment of proteomic performance, however, inherent drawbacks of PDX-derived material has resulted in efforts to identify a new source of CompRef material. In this study, we examined the utility of using a panel of seven cancer cell lines, NCI-7 Cell Line Panel, as a reference material for mass spectrometric analysis of the human proteome. Our results showed that not only is the NCI-7 material suitable for benchmarking laboratory sample preparation methods, but NCI-7 sample generation is highly reproducible at both the global and phosphoprotein levels. In addition, the predicted genomic and experimental coverage of the NCI-7 proteome suggests the NCI-7 material may also have applications as a universal standard proteomic reference.