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cDNA microarray analysis of gene expression in pathologic stage IA nonsmall cell lung carcinomas
Author(s) -
Nakamura Haruhiko,
Saji Hisashi,
Ogata Akihiko,
Hosaka Makoto,
Hagiwara Masaru,
Saijo Takamoto,
Kawasaki Norihito,
Kato Harubumi
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.11406
Subject(s) - medicine , complementary dna , stage (stratigraphy) , microarray , gene expression , pathology , microarray analysis techniques , cancer research , cell , lung , gene , gene expression profiling , carcinoma , tissue microarray , immunohistochemistry , oncology , biology , genetics , paleontology
BACKGROUND The relationship between altered gene expression and tumor progression in lung carcinoma has yet to be characterized. Gene expression in pathologic Stage IA nonsmall cell lung carcinoma specimens was analyzed using a cDNA microarray. METHODS Surgical specimens were used for the current study. The pathologic stage was IA (AJCC) in five tumors, IB in two, IIA in one, IIIA in one, and IIIB in one. Seven tumor specimens were adenocarcinomas and three were squamous cell carcinomas. Paired mRNAs from carcinoma cells and normal lung tissue specimens from the same lobe were labeled with different fluorochromes during cDNA probe synthesis in a reverse‐transcription reaction. Both synthesized, labeled cDNA probes were mixed and hybridized to the microarray. The signal intensity of each spot was measured by laser scanner and gene expression was quantified as the tumor‐to–normal fluorescence ratio (T:N ratio). The gene was overexpressed when the T:N ratio was greater than 2.0 and underexpressed when the ratio was less than 0.5. RESULTS Overall, 40 (9.4%) of the 425 genes evaluated were overexpressed, and 74 genes (17.4%) were underexpressed. In the 5 Stage IA tumor specimens, 31 (7.3%) genes were overexpressed and 76 (17.9%) were underexpressed. For 30 genes (7.1%), expression was different in Stage IA tumor specimens compared with more advanced tumor specimens. CONCLUSIONS The cDNA microarray system showed that numerous alterations of gene expression were present in early‐stage nonsmall cell lung carcinoma specimens. Cancer 2003;97:2798–805. © 2003 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.11406